Today’s Sunday crepes
February 6th, 2012

Today’s Sunday crepes

You will believe we can’t help but eat in France. The ‘chandeleur’ is another Christian feast that deserves  its very own treat: crepes. They are kind of thinner larger pancakes. The official date was Friday, but we’re used to celebrate on Sunday with family.

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You can find countless recipes on the Internet but mine is:

Whisk 2 eggs with 500 ml (2 cups) of fat free milk. Sprinkle 200 g (0.45 lbs) of white floor on the liquid preparation in little bites. Keep on whisking as you add the floor to dissolve the lumps. Add 1 tsp of baking soda and 1tbs of rhum, vanilla and cinnamon, and a pinch of salt. Heat a non stick pan, scoop the batter onto the pan. Tilt the pan with a circular motion so that the batter coats the surface evenly. Cook the crepe for about 2 minutes, until the bottom is light brown. Loosen with a spatula, turn and cook the other side. Serve hot, and stuff with whatever pleases your palate.

Mine are stuffed with chocolate, mango, banana and coconut jam from Martinique and honey. And I like to sprinkle vanilla, cinnamon powder, powdered ginger, grated coconut, all sort of nuts and some slices or dices of fresh fruits on.

La galette des rois
January 19th, 2012

La galette des rois

I got back home tonight at 7 exhausted, angry, revolted, depressed from a f…$%*€$$%…g working day having got pressured by my workmates. I heated my vegetable soup in the microwave (pumpkin, home made … delicious), and drunk my bowl of milk reading my preferred blogs Mode Personnelle (hilarious), Just Jared (shouldn’t but so nice to gossip), Cafe Mode (educated from a French fashion journalist). Feeling still harassed, I tuned in to My Yoga Online to find some excruciating class. Started one and stopped at 30 min as I was lying face down on my mat my jaw in my hand gazing at the guy. Off to shower (10 minutes boiling water on my back …. oh god so good), got back to my computer and thought ‘If I write a post, I have million of notes and ideas on hold.’

La Galette des Rois marks epiphany and we celebrate  on the first Sunday after new year. It’s a kind of pie stuffed with an almond frangipane (almond + sugar). If you find the ‘feve’ (tiny piece of porcelain), you’re crowned the king/ queen. It’s an extended family fest, you gather with the kids and watch them adults alike pat the galette to find the feve before choosing their slice. It’s hilarious.

But … I live in London for now … no galette around (I haven’t searched hard). Not big a deal for my super boyfriend though who got one for me from Pierre Herme (the best of best), back from a business trip in Paris. Instead of frangipane, it is made of chocolate. From any other pastry, I would scream ‘Sacrilege’ but look! it’s Pierre Herme.

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Pierre Herme, chef patissier
September 3rd, 2011

Pierre Herme, chef patissier

I do not (very politely) agree with anyone proclaming Laduree is the Parisian best chicest pastry. Upon my buds, the macaron bossman in Paris is Pierre Herme.

I heard that Herme worked for Ladurée when he started his career. I don’t know whether he introduced the macaron at Ladurée or just improved the existing one, but his macarons are by far yummier. The biscuit shell is delicately crunchy. It doesn’t get stick to your teeth. The heart is … creamier. The flavors are insane. Herme’s the yoda of salty raw material used to make sweet macarons. The olive oil-hazelnut, foie gras-chololate or white truffle flavors are just some example of how genius the guy is.

I have no photo of the macarons as I used to buy a couple of them and enjoy right away with my espresso leaned on the bar of a nearby bistro. I should be in Paris in 2 months. I’ll update the pics. I promise.

 

 

 

The Blue Elephant brunch, London

I booked a Sunday brunch at the London’s Blue Elephant the very day the 2012 Olympic cycle race was testing. Several roads closed to cars and pedestrians alike to free the pavement to the bikers. I stepped outside the tube station, and got stuck on the wrong side of the road by volunteers barring the streets with fences. I and my unfortunate new mates weren’t allowed to cross before 30 minutes. My reservation was in just 10 minutes. My brunch, which I starved myself for since the evening before, was the street-wide away from me. And no bikers approaching! sigh! my brunch! Suddenly (ta ta ta you hear the trumpets?) a hero (6 ft tall – 200 lbs – pink tee – very Le Stade Français the national French rugby team) pushed the fence at the other roadside and walked on through that damned street. See! See! Why he can? And I can’t? The volunteer gave me a desperate, depressed, disappointed look, pulled the fence off and left me leak out. I suppose that all patrons got stuck as I had the restaurant all for myself to take pictures. One of the waiters even asked me whether I was planning to eat ha ha ha. ‘Yes my dear! but let me enjoy it first with my eyes! ‘

The front door of the Blue Elephant of London is just as regular as any restaurant. But when you step inside, it’s a total shock. After the dark lobby, you get in a tropical garden of flowers, a built in fountain and fish ponds underneath wooden bridges. It’s awesome!

All ingredients are of the finest quality and the choice of meals and desserts is just huge. The waiters are the friendliest and most hospitable folks you can meet in London. I went once to the Parisian branch which is as yummy but a bit less spicy.

The sunday brunch is on special offer during summer: £30 only per person. You are informed from now!

Blue Elephant 3-6 Fulham Broadway, London SW6 1AA

The carrot cakes benchmark

France is the worldwide capital of the best bakeries and pastries ever. And it’s not because I’m French I’m claiming it loud. Ok I might be a tad self-centered. But, honestly! I don’t think any pastry is as fine as Pierre Herme’s. Though (there’s always a but), there’s still a couple of delicacies French pastry chefs still need to master: the cookies and the carrot cake. I benchmarked a couple of pastry bakeries last week end: Ottolenghi at Kensington and the Hummingbird Bakery on old Brompton road, both in Central London.

Both carrot cakes are equally yummy. The Hummingbird’s icing feels more like like a meringue on the tongue (which I like more) while Ottolenghi’s tastes more like a chantilly cream.

Out of competition in the slideshow is a self-called clafoutis. No so- … because it’s nothing like a clafoutis. The dough is more genoise alike like clafoutis texture is a hydrid of cake and cream. But it tastes good anyway. Go for it. It’s a win!

 

 

 

Ginger & cinnamon banana blueberry cake

Serve with a hot cafe latte

100 g/ 3.5 oz butter. 2 large eggs. 160 g/ 5.6 oz floor. baking soda. 80 g/ 2.8 oz brown sugar. 2 bananas, 400 g/14 oz blueberries, 1 tsp cinnamon, 1 tsp ginger (grated or powder). 1 tbsp of rum

Mix the butter and sugar together.  Whip the eggs and pour them onto the sugar and butter and mix well .

In a second bowl, mix the cinnamon, ginger, floor and baking soda together. Put the blueberries in (to keep them from sinking in the bottom of the cake) and pour the 2nd bowl in the 1st. Mix well. Take care to not explode the blueberries. Pour the rum in.

Leave it for 30 minutes.

Cut the bananas in two long halves. Preheat the oven 200 °C/390°F.

Pour one quarter of the dough in a mould. Put 1 half of banana, and then pour 2nd quarter of the dough and so on. Take care to have the banana and blueberry evenly distributed in the dough.

Put in the oven for 45 minutes.

 

 

 

 

Home made apple cake
May 17th, 2011

Home made apple cake

This is a nice recipe out of my favorite cake cookbook (Cakes, M. Lizambard. Ed Solar). Do slice the apple big and enjoy the cake cold just out of the fridge with fresh red berries or ice tea. It feels fresh while summer heats up outside.

80g butter, 2 large eggs, 170g floor, baking soda, 100g brown sugar, 3 apples, 50g macadamia nuts
peel the apples keeping the peel ribbon uncut, cut in halves and put 1 minute in the micro wave 600W – mix butter, sugar, and eggs – Pour the floor and baking soda in – Add the nuts and spread them evenly in the dough – preheat the oven 180°C/ 360°F – Put the bottom apple halves in a silicon mould – Pour in the dough – and put the top apple halves on. Bake for 45 min 180°C/ 360°F

Please, share with me how you liked it.