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EAT! Vancouver

EAT! Vancouver was a great way to spend the afternoon today. The entry fee was very reasonable, at only $12.00 per person, if you brought with you a non-perishable item for donation to the food bank; otherwise, admission was $14.00. There were an impressive number of exhibitors who were eager to share their products, free samples, and information. If that wasn't enough to satiate the appetite, you could purchase additional tickets to sample food and drinks from participating restaurant booths and liquor vendors.

The participants from the culinary competition created and displayed some incredibly beautiful dishes, which were so detailed, colorful, and elegant. They were absolutely gorgeous to look at. I thought this particular dish was so pretty:

Culinary Competition

Over at the Chocolate Stage, I witnessed a chocolate-eating competition, where one young fellow ate 30 gourmet chocolates in 2 minutes! Why didn't I put my hand up when they asked for a volunteer contestant from the audience?

Chocolate-Eating Competition Winner of Chocolate-Eating Competition

Today the Professional competitors in the Belcolade Chocolate Competition certainly showed off their stuff. These chocolate skates were a fantastic showpiece, representing the 2010 Winter Olympics.

Chocolate Competition Chocolate Competition

I'm also happy to report that a recent graduate from our Professional Pastry Class at NWCAV took home Bronze for his three dessert creations.  

Chocolate Competition (Dessert by Pekka Tavela) Chocolate Competition (Dessert by Pekka Tavela)Chocolate Competition (Dessert by Pekka Tavela)

Congratulations! Job well done!

Click here to see more pictures from EAT! Vancouver. Tomorrow is the last day of the festival.

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The Belcolade Chocolate Competition | May 25-27, 2007 - Vancouver, BC

Conducted by the BC Chefs' Association, the annual EAT! Vancouver Festival will be hosting a new and exciting event this year. Belcolade, North Leaf, and Rubens will be sponsoring the first Chocolate Competition where pastry professionals and students can enter to show off their skills and creativity. Three wonderful categories are open for entry:

  • Chocolate Showpiece (Theme - Thrive for Gold, 2010 Winter Olympics)
  • Plated Desserts
  • Bonbon and Praline

North Leaf will provide each competitor with 1kg of dark and 1kg of light Belcolade chocolate at no extra charge. The application deadline is May 11, 2007. Good luck to all of the contestants!

Belcolade Chocolate

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Making Sugar Showpieces | Part of the Pastry Final at NWCAV

Because our pastry class ended so close to the holidays, I have barely had any time to post the things that we had worked on in the last few weeks of the program. As part of our final exam, we had to present either a sugar or chocolate showpiece. I chose sugar because it is fun to work with and I knew that I would be taking the Advanced Chocolate Class shortly thereafter, so, it was a good opportunity to work with sugar one last time at the school.

To prepare for the final, I had sketched out what I had in mind and discussed it with Chef Marco. Having only one day to work on the showpiece, he thought I was being a little too adventurous with the amount of things that I wanted to create in my "Christmas Living Room Set". I decided to go for it anyway, preparing in advance all of my stencils and cutouts that I would need and figured out the order in which to do things.

Sketch of My Sugar Showpiece

Sketch for Sugar Showpiece Final Exam at NWCAV

As you can see from the sketch, I planned to create:

  • a brick wall with a chimney, fire, logs, and smoke
  • a mantel with stockings
  • a 3-dimensional Christmas tree with star
  • presents wrapped with ribbons
  • a wreath with berries and ribbon
  • a snow globe with a snowman
  • and train tracks around the living room set with square cars on them to hold the chocolates that we each had made over the previous 2 days (also part of our exam).

To make solid foundations and structures, you first create what is called Casting Sugar (aka Pulling Sugar) which is a combination of sugar, water, glucose, and citric acid that is boiled to the exact temperature of 154ºC (309ºF)–color can be added to the mixture but only when it reaches 138ºC (280ºF). Once you take the boiling sugar off of the heat, you immediately pour it into prepared molds. I had previously rolled out plastercine and traced and cut out the shapes I needed. To begin, I poured the floor, walls, chimney, and mantel, presents and star. You need to be really organized to know what color to prepare first, what shapes you need to assemble, and how much casting sugar you need of each color...otherwise, you can waste a lot of time making more of one color or re-doing a cutout that you shouldn't have poured a certain color into!

I was off to a shaky start because one batch of casting sugar crystallized. When this happens, it doesn't stay glossy and starts to turn white and brittle. Working with sugar is tricky. The exact temperatures and amounts need to be followed in the recipe. Sometimes crystallization can occur from having impurities or too much/too little citric acid in the mixture. I also discovered that it is really difficult to pour the boiling sugar into small shapes. It is hard to control the rate in which the mixture pours out of the pot and it can make a big mess out of the molds. I found out that it would be near to impossible to pour the train tracks and decided I would try an alternate method and "pull" them when I got to that stage.

A thermometer must be used when you are making casting or pulling sugar. After dropping 2 thermometers into the boiling sugar mixtures and destroying each, Chef Christophe looked at me, chuckled, and said, "Don't you know the slotted spoon trick yet"? You would think after 8 months of school, I had figured that one out on my own! :) Just insert the digital thermometer through a slotted spoon and hold THAT over the pot...this way, you don't melt your fingers and your thermometer at the same time!

So there I was, trying to get back on schedule to complete my list of things to do. The day flew by and I had quite a few mishaps. I would have loved to complete what I had in my sketch, but Chef Marco was right...it was a little too adventurous for one day. The Rock Sugar, which is a recipe to create shapes like this:

Example of Rock Sugar

would have been great for the smoke and a little hill for the snowman to stand beside in the snow globe. I wish I would have had the time to make the blown sugar snow globe. I had attempted this at home and thought it would have looked adorable:

Snow Globe Snowman

Blown Sugar - Part of Sugar Showpiece at NWCAV

Yes, the ball is broken in the picture above, but you get the idea of what it generally would have looked like. Blown Sugar is fascinating. A piece of Pulling Sugar is attached to the end of a pump and you gently pump air into the mass and it starts to grow like a chewing gum bubble. Too much air will burst the bubble. Once it cools, you heat up a knife and gently cut the ball off of the pump because it is extremely fragile.

My "Christmas Living Room Set" Sugar Showpiece with
Bailey's & Nougatine Chocolates

My Sugar Showpiece at NWCAV

The Christmas tree may look like it is hard to make but it's not. You simply take Casting Sugar and drizzle it with a spoon into zig-zag shapes onto parchment that have traced-out rounds that progressively get smaller. Once all the rounds have hardened, you start stacking them until the smallest one is on top - it turns into a tree very quickly!

I wound up pulling the other items on the showpiece and overall it looked okay...but I wish I wouldn't have been so rushed and would have been able to make each item look a little more delicate. It was great fun even though I had to compromise and make changes along the way.

For more pictures of my showpiece and other students' sugar and chocolate showpieces, click here.

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Advanced Chocolate Class at NWCAV

To end 2006 with a bang, Chef Marco kindly put an advanced chocolate class together for a few of us that are completely addicted. In the first two days, we made 8 different chocolates and then spent two more on building chocolate showpieces. We learned new techniques such as folding caramel and nougat together to form a center for a chocolate that resembles puff pastry. This was so delicious that it didn't even need to be dipped in chocolate. Putting it together was a little tricky (and messy) as you had to work quickly with semi-hot caramel, folding the layers, and then cutting it into pieces before the mass cools and turns hard.

Making Caramel-Layered Nougatine at NWCAV

Layered Nougatine in the Advanced Chocolate Class at NWCAV

We made two chocolate showpieces. Chocolate showpieces are made completely out of chocolate and are entirely edible. We first made an underwater world which consisted of a sea-bed, coral/sea-life, and fish. The second was a chocolate chef who turned out to be absolutely adorable. The showpieces are so much work which is why we probably don't see them that often. If you ever get the chance to see one up close, really appreciate how much time and skill goes into it. For us die-hard chocolate fans, it would have been nice to spend more time on each piece, perfecting them, but Chef Marco would have been trapped at the school until next year...literally!

My Chocolate Chef Showpiece

My Chocolate Underwater World Showpiece

Not saying that you will learn all of these techniques in these classes, but if you are interested in beginning to learn more about the basics of the pastry world and chocolate, without committing to a full-time program, try out Chef Marco's Serious Foodie Pastry Classes. They will not disappoint!

As for me, I will not be making a New Year's resolution to eat less chocolate. I believe quality chocolate is healthy and has a wonderful healing affect. In the New Year, I plan to have my own little chocolate factory in my own kitchen. I will keep on experimenting with different flavors and techniques and be sure to share what I learn as I go!

Click here to see more of our work during the course.

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Obscene Sugar Work

Last week we were introduced to sugar work. This is the first time that I have worked with sugar, pulling it, stretching it, blowing it, and trying to manipulate it into many shapes. Surprisingly, I found it to be a lot of fun. We are exposed to many things during this course and unfortunately there isn't a lot of time for repetition. Repetition is our homework. In class, we are absorbing as much as we can.

For our very first sugar "showpiece", my partner and I decided to do a tropical theme - a tiny island with a palm tree and some rocks. As the pieces are put together, you can sort of see the showpiece taking shape...although our showpiece was the center of attention for many giggles and jokes. The culinary students passing through the pastry kitchen were full of snickers and we ultimately had to put an unfinished sign on the piece. It really was meant to be a palm tree...it just needed its fronds which we weren't able to attach until the next day. Once they were attached, the piece got broken before a picture of the final product could be taken :(

Sugar Showpiece: Island and Unfinished Palm Tree, NWCAV  Sugar Showpiece: Island and Unfinished Palm Tree, NWCAV

We also were able to work on individual projects. I tried to create a honeycomb showpiece with bees and flowers. For Day 2 of sugar work, it looked alright. Burns are a big hazard when sugar is cooked to 154°C . One little droplet on your skin causes an immediate blister and tonnes of pain. I fortunately only got one blister and some of the molten sugar landed on one of my nails. Owwwwie!

Sugar is beautiful and very interesting. Once you start pulling it and stretching it, the color changes. It goes from a bolder color to a lighter, silkier color with a silvery and shiny sheen. When a ball of sugar is created, you need to work quickly under a heat lamp so that you can form it into various shapes before it hardens.
 
Pulling Sugar (under heat lamp)

Here is a picture of my bee showpiece along with a ribbon and some sugar that I had blown into a hollow ball.

Bee Sugar Showpiece at NWCAV    Bee Showpiece, Ribbon, Blown Sugar - NWCAV

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I am a graduate of the full-time Culinary and Pastry program at the Northwest Culinary Academy of Vancouver and studied at L'Academie de Cuisine in Maryland, USA. Here, I'll share my experiences in the food industry. I currently work at Rouxbe - The world's leading online cooking school.

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