Category Archives: Career

Birthday Bashes!

A few years ago, I was going to bridal showers, bachelorette parties and weddings every weekend.  Then it was baby showers, and now I’m at the age where lunch date topics with girlfriends include: spit-up, nipples, rash cream, disciplining, Dora and Ugly Dolls.  I don’t know where the time went, but it seems like yesterday we were guessing as to who would get married first and talking about crushes.

Now character-themed parties, goodie bags and smash cakes fill our weekends.  I’ve been privileged to have such trusting friends with young kids that have fun and colorful-themed parties.  These opportunities to play with flour, sugar, food coloring and fondant have been a challenge but also was fun to work on new techniques and practice baking.  Check out the photos below and their captions to see how it all came together.  Thanks to Christine, Paolo, and Zain for having such fun parties and their Mommies for being awesome friends!  I can’t wait to do a Justin Bieber themed cake!

Beautifully shape Mickey Sugar Cookies with a perfectly butter taste.  Recipe from Sweetopia found here!

Fondant Minnie ears and bow for the cake:  for the ears I rolled out black fondant to about 1/4 inch thick and then shoved in wooden skewers used for grilling; for the bow I followed this TUTORIAL which was much easier than I had imagined!

Finished Minnie Cake for Christine:  marble cake inside with Swiss meringue butter cream covered with fondant.

Birthday girl Christine enjoying her cake (sorry a little blurry).

Royal Icing decorated cookies as favors for the kiddies. I need to work on my cookie decorating skills.  Dark colored icing, like black and red are extremely hard to make!  It’s hard to prevent bleeding too.

Mickey rice krispie treats just like they have at the park! All you need is a pan of rice krispie treats (recipe per the cereal box), a Mickey-shaped cookie cutter, some chocolate chips melted and sprinkles!

Curious George party for Paolo!  Banana Cupcakes per David Lebovitz recipe with whipped chocolate ganache and caramel Swiss meringue butter-cream.

Paolo with his awesome parents.  The cake was decorated with hand-crafted fondant Curious George, big yellow hat (with cardboard in the middle to hold up the shape, leaves, balloons on floral wire, and banana runts (which were the hardest things to find, evidently nobody eats runts any more!).

Ugly Doll royal icing sugar cookies for Zain’s 1st Birthday

Ox smash cake with Ugly Doll cupcakes:  perfectly chocolate cake (by Glorious Treats) with chocolate ganache filling and perfectly vanilla cake (also by Glorious Treats) with butterscotch ganache filling.  These cupcakes were redone at the last minute due to a slight tip of the container and smooshed icing by a certain husband, but it was for the better as they look much better than the original!  They were also frozen 3 days in advance due to Labor Day weekend plans, which may have made the ganache filling a little harder than desired  (it didn’t ooze like I though it would) and perhaps the vanilla cupcake was a little dry.  Next time, plan to be around the weekend when they party is happening and make cupcakes within a day of eating.

Happy Zain with Mommy and Daddy

56 sticks of butter!

Massive amounts of butter

Massive amounts of butter

My love for baking is definitely not beneficial to the waistline.  That is why I recruit my friends and family to consume my creations.  My big mouth sometimes gets me into situations that are over my head, but I’m always up for a challenge.  Zach’s law firm holds an annual pig roast for the Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce and since last year’s dessert was a big disappointment (too few bites and expensive), I begged to be the provider of a full dessert buffet for this year.  I had no idea what I was getting into, even after figuring out that 4 different kinds of bite-sized desserts at 150 pieces each multiplied out to 600 individual pieces that I’d have to hand make.  Why not try though, right?

I started planning the menu and figuring out an operation schedule right away, even though the party was still 2 months out.  I was excited, my eyes shined bright and wide when I talked about it.  There were nights where I couldn’t sleep because I had so much anticipation and anxiousness to start baking.   There were requests for some favorites of mine, including the Butterbeer/Butterscotch Cupcake and a Rockyroad Brownie.  I had been obsessed with whoopie pies, so I just decided to fill my obsession and make 150 whoopie pies, including 3 different flavors (traditional chocolate with butter cream, banana whoopie with Nutella butter cream, and chocolate with strawberry butter cream).  Another hit of mine during the summer is the Red White and Blueberry trifle.  How cute does 150 individual mini cups of berry trifle sound?  Thus the menu took shape.

Claire Baking with a Smile

Claire Baking with a Smile

A few weeks went by, I forced myself to stop thinking about the party, and then we left for a week’s vacation to Hawaii.  I came back refreshed and ready to tackle the challenge, but needed to recruit some skilled hands first.  Thank goodness my bestie Claire was available and willing to bake into the wee hours of the night with me.  Her mad skill and the way we move together harmoniously around the kitchen was a winning partnership.

Ingredients Galore!

Ingredients Galore!

The weekend before the party came and we went shopping for ingredients.  When we calculated and wrote the list out, there were giggles and chuckles all over the place.  I mean, 13 lbs of flour, 14 lbs of butter, 14 lbs of sugar, 48 eggs is just insane!  Thank goodness for Costco, or we really would have really looked looney.  Standing next to people with 150 rolls of toilet paper and 20 lbs meat at the check out was reassuring.   I did feel my heart stop when we put the butter in our shopping cart though.

Mini ButterBeer Cupcakes with Butterscotch Swiss Meringue Butter Cream

Mini ButterBeer Cupcakes with Butterscotch Swiss Meringue Butter Cream

2 full days of baking and 2 nights of assembling and packing, filled with lots of bestie bonding, and sore backs and feet made the challenge fun.  We did run into some hick-ups though, like a full blast Chicago summer, spiking temps to the 90’s and above.  A hot day does not make having the oven going all day a pleasant environment, even if the air conditioning was on full blast.  It also wasn’t the best temperature to make Swiss meringue butter cream, where you have to whip a hot cooked mixture of egg whites and sugar until it is cooled to room temperature before whipping in the butter.  It took us over an hour and frozen pie dough wrapped around the bowl with a dishtowel to get the meringue cooled, and still the texture wasn’t the smooth silky goodness that the butter cream is supposed to be.  Thank goodness that this icing is extremely forgivable and just needed to be cooled down a bit more in the fridge and whipped up again the next day.  If this butter cream worked with the craziness that went on in the kitchen that day, it can also work for you!  Also, it holds up pretty well outside on a sunny 95 F degree-day on top of mini cupcakes (or anything else for that matter).

Since the weather was our biggest challenge (along with I guess the whole part of being inexperienced in making a large quantity of food to serve to strangers), we decided that the berry trifle would have been disastrous and potentially harmful to serve outside on a hot sunny humid day.  Cream and heat do not mix and should not be mixed when consumed by living beings.  Plus the cups that I bought for the individual servings just seemed too big of a portion.  So instead of the trifle, I went with another summery dessert, berry pies in mini form, perfect for a portable bite.  Claire’s staple piecrust recipe was a savior and delicious last minute swap-o-roo saving the day.  Even Zach pitched in late Monday night egg washing each 4-inch pie before baking.

Even with challenging weather, a last minute swap-out, and complete in-experience, we were a complete success!  Everyone loved the variety, tastiness, and cute portion sizes.  I even got quiet a few questions asking about my “business” and if I was available to cater a few other events!  May be one day soon, but for now, it’s just me, this blog, the kitchen, and lots of friends!  Thank you Andrew Szocka P.C. for giving me this opportunity and believing in me.  Special thank you to Claire and Zach for their hard labor and calming words.  Till the next challenge!!

Whoopie Pies!

Whoopie Pies!

The Display

The Display

Cupcake Display with piggie flower

Cupcake Display with piggie flower

Berry Hand Pies (Blueberry on left & Strawberry on right)

Berry Hand Pies (Blueberry on left & Strawberry on right)

Here are the recipes:

Butterbeer / Butterscotch Cupcake Cakes – Amy Bites

Banana Whoopie Pies (filled with Swiss Meringue Butter Cream flavored with Nutella) – One Girl Cookies

Chocolate Whoopie Pies (filled with Swiss Meringue Butter Cream) – One Girl Cookies

Rocky Road Brownies (I doubled the batter recipe for a half sheet pan) – Carla Hall The Chew

Swiss Meringue Butter Cream – Sweetapolita

Claire’s Pie Crust – Cottage Revolution

DIY Pastry School

Practicing my handwriting

Even though I am a professional eater, I am an amateur baker, cake maker, and chocolatier.  Professional pastry school is just out of reach right now.  Time, financial responsibilities, and my own indecisiveness about what I want to do with my life stops me from signing up with the French Pastry School in Chicago.  But that doesn’t mean I can’t learn on my own and still pursue my enthusiasm of making yummy carby delights.   So, I’ve decided to home school for now and see where it goes.

As I’ve mentioned before, my favorite resource to learning about pastry and bread is through Groupon.  The last month or so have been filled with super fun, ½ off, and hands-on classes at various businesses through out the area.  I tackled the art of making French Bread in the post here, and then I took a basic cake decorating class at Give Me Some Sugar.  That was followed up with a chocolate class at Canady Chocolates, which included a lengthy lecture and presentation on the origins of the cocoa. Next up in June is a French pastry class at Cook Au Vin, where we’ll be learning how to make the prefect French macaron cookie (my favorite) and other pastries like éclairs (YUM!).

Icing a Cake

Practicing Rosettes

Shapes with Icing

My Practice Cake

I’ve also tapped into the Internet with websites like:

The Fresh Loaf:  http://www.thefreshloaf.com/

David Lebovitz:  http://www.davidlebovitz.com/

Cake Central:  http://cakecentral.com/

Another good source of course is the Foodnetwork and the reliable Martha Stewart.  I enjoy shows like Alton Brown’s Good Eats because I love to know “why” and he explains it so well.  Martha Bakes is also another one of my favorite.  She can be a little dry and egotistical, but that’s what makes the show fun.

Granted this method of learning is rather unstructured and I’m probably not learning the best / traditional methods, but at least it’s fun and I’m not forced to go to class and do homework when I’m not feeling up to it.  The funny thing is, I do want to go to class and afterwards, I want to start practicing and experimenting right away, even into late night and the early hours of the morning.  Maybe this is what school is like for nerds (not that I’m not a nerd myself).

What are your passions and how are you tapping into non-traditional methods to learn more about them?

Chocolate Mess

Filled and Painted Chocolate Molds Drying

Gourmet Chocolates Made By Me!

Since traditional school is ending for most, my home school final was a tiered baby shower cake for a co-worker using fondant for the first time.

Baby Shower Cake Final

Rhino

Elephant Topper

Zebra

Monkey and Tiger

French Bread Class at Cook Au Vin

French Boules

Groupon is a wonderful thing! I must be their target audience, because at least 1 Groupon always sparks my interest every week. Cooking classes, cake decorating, car details, and of course restaurants are totally my cup of tea, and how can you refuse 50% off?! Perhaps it’s because Chicago is Groupon’s home, but it seems like we do get more of a variety than others, at least than the areas that my family and friends live in (NJ, NY, IN, IA, etc.). Groupons are also great gifts (depending on the expiration dates)! For Christmas this past year, I received 3 Groupons from my husband, who’s been trained to look out for deals now. 2 related to food (of course), and the other was to have my car detailed (which is the ultimate gift in my mind, I hate cleaning). So, this past weekend, I cashed in a Groupon and joined in on the French bread baking antics at Cook Au Vin in Bucktown with my fabulous friend Claire, who came up from Indianapolis just for the occasion.

I was giddy with anticipation all day. I could already smell the delicious waft of freshly baked bread and sour yeast during our morning yoga session, and I couldn’t clear my head at all. All I could imagine was stuffing my chubby cheeks with crusty chewy bread slathered in butter. I’ve been on what I’ve been calling my “Hawaii Diet” the past month or so in preparation for bikini weather when we head to Hawaii for our belated honeymoon (5 years!) in a few months. A whole baguette of French bread and butter wasn’t really on the list of things to stuff your face with, but we all have to indulge once in a while, right? Plus, it was my designated “Free Day”. I was a little worried because Claire, who is extremely healthy and lives sustainably, had mentioned that she was taking bread out of her diet because it made her body feel not as good, but it’s a good thing she’s a carbivore too and decided to eliminate dairy instead! :)

Claire Kneading

Poolish

In the 4 hour class, we mixed, kneaded, cut, rolled, and baked over 150 beautiful loaves of handmade baguettes and boules. There were 4 different recipes, including handmade baguettes, machine mixed baguette dough, a viennoiserie, and wheat sour dough. I wondered how we were going to make so many different kinds of bread in only 4 hours considering it takes me like a day and a half to make 2 baguettes (see previous post here), but the magic of experts, proofing closets, and thinking ahead allowed us to take home at least 2 loaves of each kind. That’s right, that’s at least 8 loaves. Well, I took home 10!! I didn’t feel bad though, there was plenty to go around for our class of around 13 people. As I rolled out at least 5 loaves of each kind, I kept thinking that Cook Au Vin must be using us as cheap labor (as in we actually paid them to roll out bread) for their bakery and cafe, but practice makes perfect (and plus, I’m sure we’re not licensed food handlers to have been able to sell the products to the public. It was a BYOB class, mind you.

Wheat Sour Dough ready to be baked

French Baguette’s Ready for Baking

We first learned how to make a baguette. We cut dough using bench scrappers from a massive block of already risen dough (think like the size of those plastic storage containers you have in your basement), weighted it, and flattened it with our fingers into a rectangle. Then we folded the bottom half of the long side up to the middle of the rectangle, smashed in the seam with our floured palms. Then we folded the top half down just past the the seam already created and smashed in the new seam. The next part was what gives the baguette a plump form. We again folded the top half of the dough to the bottom of the rectangle and pinched in the seam with our thumbs as we folded, and then we rolled out the log to a long baguette shape. As the night went on, we also formed boules (round loaves), batards (shorter baguetts), buns and braided a few with the sour dough.

We also worked with a viennoiserie dough like brioche, which has eggs butter and milk incorporated. It was more like a lighter sugar dough texture instead of the springy yeasty ones we had been working with. Because it has a sweeter taste it was perfect for making hamburger and hot dog buns or even filling a small loaf with white chocolate chips and frozen raspberries (frozen so that they don’t get smooshed when rolling), Cook Au Vin’s specialty and Zach’s favorite.

Most of the dough was already mixed and risen so that we could form and bake within the 5 hours, but we did make the handmade baguette from start to finish. This was what I felt was the most informative and fun thing about the class. I loved feeling the dough at the different stages. Our French instructors had us smell the yeastiness and touch the dough and see how it bounced back at us when risen. Even though we got the recipes, there were no times, baking temps, and instructions on the sheet. Our instructors said it was more about the feel and it all depends on the temperature and humidity of that day. Baking is an art form! Claire and I wrote down random notes and had comments like, “when if feels blahhh….” and “you know”. Hopefully we’ll be able to recall our fun experience and replicate at home. If not, looks like I’ll be looking out for another Groupon!

Check out Claire’s blog about our bread adventure together and all the other wonderful things and foods that she makes here!

My Heaven

Here are some tips:

- Salt kills yeast, so add it last when mixing the dough. We added it to the last bit of water when mixing it in.

- Air needs to be incorporated into French bread dough so that you have the lovely air pockets inside. We kneaded the mixed dough by strongly slapping it on the table, and then folding one side over the other. And then turned 90 degrees clockwise and then slapped and folded for like 15-30 mins. until the dough was smooth like a baby’s bottom.

- There are a few kinds of starters: 1) 50% flour, 50% water by weight and a little bit of yeast (poolish), 2) 50% flour and 50% water by weight (levian), 3) a little more water than flour. We used poolish for the baguette recipes and levian for the sour dough.

- To get a crusty bread, you need to incorporate steam at the beginning of baking. At the bakery, they had special ovens that injects steam with a button before we put in the bread. To simulate this at home, put a bowl of bowling water at the bottom of your oven before you put the bread in to create a steamy atmosphere. No need to spritz the bread with water. We didn’t talk about it in class, but baking on a pizza stone helps with the crustiness (they had a stone oven).

- My problem is always the final rise / proofing stage. Recipes say that it should double in size and I wait for hours for that to happen. Maybe we were pressed for time or the proofing boxes are magical, but after like 30-45 mins. of the final rise, we put the dough in the oven even if it didn’t double in size. From the final results, I think it was just fine!!

Friends from our class: Julie, Pia, Claire, Marisa, Peggy, Pam and Me

Our awesome instructors: Raphael and Claude

No Green Beer Here!

Picture from Good Food Festival & Conference Chicago (goodfoodfestivals.com)

The weather was rather unusual this St. Patty’s day.  I don’t ever recall wearing shorts and basking in sunlight in mid March.  I’m super torn about this strange weather pattern we are having.  On one hand, I love that the sun is shining and that the wind isn’t a bitter cold so that I can actually enjoy the sun, but on the other hand, I can’t help but think this is just the calm before the storm and that 80 degrees in March is wrong.

I do try my part to live some-what sustainably.  I drive a hybrid, I recycle and reuse, I eat sustainably and locally as much as I can, and I’m always unplugging things around the house.  I also support great events like the Good Food Festival & Conference that was held in Chicago this last Thurs. through Sat.  I mainly attended the Finance Conference and lectures on Thurs. as that’s where most of my interests are and my work the past year has been in, but the fun part was at the trade show and Localicious night.  There are so many inventive chefs and food businesses out there making a difference and making delicious sustainable food.  Check out what happened last week (from a butchering demonstration to a bus tour of urban farming in Chicago) and I hope to see you there next year!

Now to the St. Patty’s Day celebration.  Although I am of Asian decent and heritage my husband has red hair and freckles.  We’re not 100% sure where his genes are from (he’s a super mutt), but there’s a high probability that he has some Irish in him.  So to celebrate this year, he drank himself silly at a bachelor party and came home to homemade Irish soda bread and corned beef and cabbage.  It’s not very inventive or extraordinary, but we really only eat this kind of meal once every year.  He on the other hand, will occasionally drink himself silly more than once a year.

St. Patty’s Day Dinner (Corned Beef and Cabbage)

This meal could not have been simpler!  I picked up an already marinated/pickled piece of corned beef, organic cabbage carrots and an onion from Whole Foods, shoved it all into my crock pot with 3 cups of water, 2 tablespoons of apple cider vinegar, 2 tablespoon of brown sugar, 3 garlic cloves minced, and a bay leaf, and then I left it to cook for about 6 hours on high.  The soda bread is also a cinch to make and is buttery and delicious (as it was last year), but this year I didn’t have enough all-purpose flour (and didn’t think to purchase some while I was out).  So, I subbed in whole wheat flour instead, which made it a bit dry and definitely not as tasty.  I did not make any other adjustments to the recipe from Martha Stewart after I subbed in wheat flour, so that could have been my flaw.  It seemed like there needed to be a bit more moisture in the bread.

Irish Soda Bread using Wheat Flour (Fail!)

Lessons learned this St. Patty’s day weekend, “green” up your home every day and hope that our seasons will come back, and make sure to look up adjustments that need to be made to recipes if you substitute ingredients (especially when baking).

PS.  Happy B-Day to my big Sis!  It’s tough having a birthday on a holiday!