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Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Vanilla Macaron with Mascarpone filling

Above: Vanilla Mascarpone Filling



Above: Piping filling onto macaron shells


Above: Vanilla macarons with vanilla mascarpone filling

Sunday, 30 January 2011

Matcha and Chocolate Macarons


J'ai gagnée!

Top: Chocolate macarons with chocolate buttercream
Bottom: Matcha macarons with matcha buttercream

Just in time for Lunar New Year...only thirteen attempts too late. In light of my new success, I vow to never contemplate on depriving my macaron recipe of even the slightest grain (or two grams, cough*) of sugar.


Above: Chocolate macarons

 Since it's my first successful batch, I decided that the macarons deserve no less than some embellishments of brush-strokes that I meticulously hand-painted. All of my hopes that my artwork would become the next Picasso came to an end once my sister insisted that I subconsciously drew cannabis on my matcha macarons, while my guests laughed nervously and brushed them off as merely palm trees. I was shooting for an abstract concept that elicits some pensive mood, but instead, I got illegal substance and Caribbean plant.

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Fat

The French force-feed (gavage) their goose to add buttery texture to its liver (foie gras). The Japanese massage their Wagyu cow whilst feasting it with warm sake and soothing music to improve its appetite and peace of mind, thus produce more tender beef (Matsusaka). Both technique comes down to the ultimate purpose - to fatten.

Who says the Asian people are more ruthless?

And I write this while dreaming of the endearing embrace of Otoro around my palette.


Fat in its purest, most beautiful form.

Thursday, 15 July 2010

Thao's Guide to Tasting Cheese

"Age is something that is of no importance, unless you are a cheese"
- Billie Burke


Location: Le Beaulieu, Sofitel Metropole Hanoi


This is a rudimentary photographic guide to tasting cheese. Cheese should be tasted at room temperature, from centre to rind, tasting starts from mild to strong, soft to hard - within the same category.
Sniff your cheese:
The nose is the best detector of flavor. Different types of cheese provide a variety of aroma that contributes mainly to how the cheese tastes like. Smell can evoke visualization of flavor from grassy to earthy.
Heat things up:
Take the cheese and rub it between your thumb and index finger to warm the cheese and release its aroma. This is also to evaluate the moisture of the cheese from semi-soft, semi-hard to hard.
Peruse the texture

Appearance is also an indicator of the cheese condition. Hard cheese should have a smooth interior with occasional holes but mold-free. Soft cheese is at its peak when it's sagging and ripened.
Taste


Pick a small dollop and put it on the tip of your tongue. Don't chew, taste! Listen to the cheese and savor, work the cheese throughout your taste buds. Press the cheese against the roof of your mouth and exhale through the nose to bring the scent through your nasal passages
Enjoy.
Thao Bach, C. M*

* cheese monster