Sunday, June 24, 2012

Crystallized Petals

Only use edible flowers, such as roses, lavender and daisies, for this project.

Choose a good quality , clean rose and carefully pull off all the petals, wiping them gently with a moist tissue. Whip an egg white, place the clean petals onto baking paper, and brush both sides of each petal with egg white.

Drop each petal into a bowl of caster sugar and turn to coat completely. Dry on a wire rack.

When the petals are dried, they should be stored in a n airtight container between sheets of baking paper, avoid touching. The taste and perfume when you bite into these will be as fresh as the day were made.

Hint: Add clear essence to your cake batter to match the flavour of the flower you are decorating with. Sweet Deliveries stock, Lavender, Rose and Violet essences which are suitable for this use.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Glass Rolling Pins

It is believed glass rolling pins were introduced in 1870's or 1880's,

The Etruscans are thought to be the first people to have used rolling pins for food preparation. In more modern kitchens, rolling pins can be found made of wood, ceramic, marble, stainless steel, copper, aluminum and silicone but seldom does a glass rolling pin turn up in a drawer.

As for the hole-in-one end of this rolling pin, it was there to allow cold water to be placed inside the barrel. The end was sealed with a cork.  This cold water facilitated the dough-rolling process by keeping such items as puff pastry cool, and the water gave the rolling pin more heft for pushing and rolling the dough.

In the 19th century, rolling pins could be quite elaborate. Some were painted with images of ships and messages such as "A Present From a Friend" or "A Present to My Mother From Her Son." Glass examples were spattered with several types and colors or came in solid colors that ran the gamut from clear colorless to red, blue, green and white.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Quick Tip

COLOURING FONDANT

Next time you need to colour fondant, consider using your Electric Mixer and give your wrists a rest.

Attach the dough hook to your mixer, cut the fondant into smallish pieces, add the colour them turn your mixer on low speed. Gradually increase the speed, once the fondant is marbled stop the mixer. Remove the fondant onto your prepared surface and complete the process by hand.

This method reduced the time it takes to colour medium to large amounts of fondant.

Just be carefull not to over heat your mixer, if you are concerned that the mixer cannot cope with the load, either remove some of the fondant or stop the process completely.

Biscuits Roses de Reims

Biscuits Roses de Reims
The oldest biscuit factory in France, Maison Fossier the home of biscuit rose de Reims, the regions most famous sweet. Served with Champagne, the meringue-like biscuit rose is made from egg whites ande sugar, flavour...ed with vanilla and coloured with cochineal (a small insect from which crimson coloured dye is derived), imparting a pink rose blush. The biscuit rose de Reims became popular in France in 1880's loved by Kings Louis XV, Charles X and Louise X1 who served them to guests at his coronation.The light, delicate dough is in fact baked twice successively, which gives the biscuit the particularity of not flaking when soaked up in liquids.

Slightly powdered with icing sugar, this French treat is traditionally enjoyed with outstanding Champagne wines; respecting the tradition, dunking the biscuit in a glass of Champagne or local red wine enhances all the wine aromas