Trials & Tribulations of Running a Small Business

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Blackmarket @ Newport Beach Film Festival












Last night the bakery "represented" at the Swedish afterparty at the Newport Beach Film Festival. The setting: Design within Reach in Atrium Court. The guests: volunteers, film-buffs, film-makers and supporters of the festival. The menu: Mini Basque and Black Widow tarts, Florentines, Brownies, Passion Fruit Marshmallows, Russian Tea Cookies & Cranberry Shorties.

We had a fabulous time (as you can see here) and would like to give a big sugary thank you to Greg and his minions at the Festival! See you next year!!!

And coming up this Saturday, you can find Blackmarket Bakery at the Black Market at Bat's Day.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Breakfast Breads a la Carolyn!

I recently pulled out the recipes from the breakfast breads class. I decided to make the Pecan Sticky Buns although I did not have any pecans so I made some as directed without nuts. But the recipe made so much dough that I was inspired to use it up in different ways after taking the laminated doughs class and learning that the same dough can create many different things.

I did have some sliced almonds. I made the honey/brown sugar/butter filling and put it into the bottom of a greased tube pan. I sprinkled some sliced almonds over the filling and then put the cut rolls tightly in the pan. I let them rise and then baked them. After I removed them from the oven and let them cool slightly I inverted the pan and had created a lovely almond caramel coffee cake ring. But I still had more dough! So I looked in my cupboard and did not have any more muffin tins but I did have a popover pan. So I put the cut cinnamon rolls in the pan and baked. When they came out they had tall bottoms and when "frosted" actually looked like cupcakes. I made a cinnamon frosting by mixing 1 C of powdered sugar, 2 tablespoons of cream and 2 teaspoons of cinnamon.

Blackmarket hands on classes are wonderful. You really learn how to tell when something is ready and what to do when things don't look quite right. I enclosed photos of the ring as it was rising, the finished coffee cake and the cinnamon buns baked in the popover pan before and after icing them with the cinnamon frosting.

Thanks for the lessons!
Carolyn

Monday, April 13, 2009

Easter Egg Salad on White - by guest writer Jen.


At our house, Easter eggs are usually elaborate affairs. We chip tiny holes on the ends, blow out the centers, and spend hours creating works of art to keep forever. This year, I had a cold, and so it was decided that my germs would render the eggs inedible. Hence, we had to boil the eggs to be dyed, and then broken soon thereafter for egg salad. So we did a simple dye job. After hiding and hunting, the eggs returned to the refrigerator. Knowing egg salad would call for sandwich bread, I baked a loaf:

T
his is a delicious -- and foolproof! -- recipe that takes 2 hours from start to finish, including rising and baking times. I've made this four times, messed up the rising temperature, mismeasured the yeast, and still the bread turns out delicious. I didn't make any mistakes this time. It baked up soft, fluffy, and flavorful. I could eat the whole loaf plain! But I didn't (this time).

And voila! Egg Salad with Radishes, Green Onions, and Fennel. Easter Bunny Approved.

American Sandwich Bread

Makes one 9-inch loaf
from The New Best Recipe

3 3/4 C (18 3/4 oz) unbleached AP flour, plus more for dusting the work surface
2 t salt
1 C warm whole milk (about 110 degrees)
1/3 C + 2 T warm water (about 110 degrees)
2 T unsalted butter, melted

3 T honey

1 envelope (about 2 1/4 t) instant yeast

1. Adjust oven rack to lowest position and heat the oven to 200 degrees. Once the temp reaches 200 degrees, maintain the heat for 10 min, then turn off the oven.
2. Mix flour and salt in food processor. Mix milk, water, butter, honey
and yeast together and pour slowly through feeding tube. Process until a rough ball forms, 35 seconds. Turn the dough onto lightly floured work surface and knead by hand until dough is smooth and satiny, 4 to 5 min.
3. Place the dough in a very lightly oiled larg
e bowl, rubbing the dough around the bowl to coat lightly. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and place in the warmed oven until the dough doubles in size, 40 to 50 min.
4. Gently press dough into an 8” square that measures 1” thick.
Starting with side farthest away from you, roll the dough firmly like a jelly roll, pressing with your fingers to make sure the dough sticks to itself. Turn the dough seam-side down in a greased 9X5 loaf pan and press it gently so it touches all four sides of the pan. Cover with plastic wrap; set aside in a warm spot until the dough almost doubles in size, 20 to 30 min.
5. Keep one oven rack at lowest position and place the other at middle.
Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Place an empty baking pan on the bottom rack. Bring 2 C water to boil and pour into empty pan on the bottom rack. Set loaf on middle rack and bake until thermometer reads 195 degrees, inserted at an angle from the short end just above the pan rim, 40 to 50 min. Remove from pan, transfer to wire rack, cool to room temp. Slice and serve.

Egg Salad with Radishes, Green Onions, and Fennel

adapted from The New Best Recipe

6 hard-boiled eggs, peeled and diced

1/4 C mayonnaise

3 minced radishes
2 T finely chopped green onion

1 T minced fresh fennel
1 celery rib, chopped fine
2 t Dijon mustard
2 t lemon juice

1/4 t salt
ground black pepper


Mix everything together and add pepper to taste.

Marshmallows - why not?


Marshmallows are sticky, sweet and just plain ridiculous. But they're also fun to make and eat, so here's our bakery marshmallow recipe.

You will need a candy thermometer, a brownie pan (9" x 13"), and a kitchenaid mixer with a whisk. If you want to flavor your marshmallows, you can either add an extract at the end of mixing (with some food coloring if you choose) or you can substitute 1/2 or less of the water that the gelatin blooms in with another liquid (like fruit puree or fruit juice).

Just watch out for using tropical fruits like pineapple, mango, kiwi because they contain an enzyme that causes the gelatin not to set. Otherwise you would have marshmallow fluff...

Vanilla Marshmallows

Cold Water 4 oz

Gelatin (powdered) 2 Tbsp

Water 4 oz

Corn Syrup 7-3/4 oz

Sugar 16-1/4 oz

Salt ¼ tsp

Vanilla 2 tsp

Need: Greased Brownie Pan, lined with plastic & greased again, Powdered Sugar for dusting, Ice Bath, Candy Thermometer

Directions

1. Thoroughly dissolve the gelatin in the cold water in the bowl of a standing mixer, fitted with whisk attachment.

2. Pour the water, corn syrup, sugar & salt into a saucepan fitted with a candy thermometer, in that order. Bring to a boil, without stirring, and then cook to 240 F. Take the pan off the burner. Leave the thermometer in the pan and shock the bottom of the pan in a bowl of ice water to stop it cooking. Allow the syrup to cool in the saucepan until the temperature is 210 F.

3. Pour the syrup over the bloomed gelatin in the mixer bowl. Begin mixing at medium speed. Once the marshmallow thickens, you may increase the mixer speed to high. Whip the mixture for 5 – 10 minutes, until the marshmallow is fluffy, very thick and still warm. By the time it is done, the mixer should be laboring. Pour in vanilla to taste and whisk until just combined.

4. Transfer the marshmallow to the lined, greased pan. Cover with a second piece of greased plastic wrap and press out to even the top. Allow to cure for several hours or even overnight.

5. Sift powdered sugar onto a cutting board. Remove the plastic wrap and flip the marshmallow slab onto the board. Sift sugar on the top.

6. Cut the marshmallows with scissors or a knife dipped in powdered sugar. Roll the cut edged in more powdered sugar. Store, in a container indefinitely.



Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Dots & Bows


This was the weekend of dots & bows - fondant, that is. Here are a few pictures from this past weekend's cakes - I didn't get photos of all of them - plus we hosted a wedding reception here on Sunday (congratulations Jennifer & Ben!) - so their cake is in the lineup as well. Let's hear it for polka dots! They cover up and make things cute at the same time...

Blast From My Past

I just found a disc filled with pictures from my culinary school days. Not too long ago, but it still seems like a lifetime ago. My certificate program at the CIA in St. Helena started right after September 11, 2001 and we finished up by June 1st, 2002. Our class consisted of 17 students, who spent 7am - 2pm every weekday together. Sad to say, I have only kept track of 3 of them... So, we learned a lot, made tons of mistakes, and ate tons of good food! Here are some of the choices pics. People pictured are Tiffany, Fonda, Sara, Christopher, Rachel, Anne, Maria, Chef Jorin, Chika (@ the Tandoor), & the Scharffenberger factory tour (including Chef Durfee) ...