Sunday, November 21, 2010

Black Bear Diner - my Food Adventure

I visited Black Bear Diner off Highway 80 the other evening.  I ordered Black Bear Dinner Combos - BBQ Pork Ribs and seasoned sliced Tri-Tip Steak.  I chose soup of the day - Chicken Noodle soup.  Overall experience - disappointed.  I sat at the counter facing the kitchen.  Services - the waitresses were very attentive.  Food - I think the cook could have paid more attention in the details and made it better.  When I am spending money to eat out, I expect the food to be "yummy"  or "I want to come back."   I don't think I am impressed with the BBQ Pork Ribs and sliced Tri-Tip Steak I had.  The chicken noodle soup looked like what I used to fix quickly at the office in the microwave after I dump the chicken noodle soup out of a packet into a cup filled with hot boiling water.  I thought it was supposed to be served with a Corn Bread Muffin, but I got a cracker.  The baked potato tasted dry or it's been sitting in the oven for a long periods of time because I can taste the somewhat 'burnt' taste of the skin in the potato.  And the potato looks hollow the way it is served.  The BBQ pork ribs came right off the bones and that's a good sign, but I can't quite say, "Yum".  Did they remove the 'silver' in the back of the pork ribs?  The vegetables seem like out of the freezer and just sauted? or is it fresh vegetables sliced by untrained hands.  I like to eat sauted onions, but they are mostly outer layer of the onions and they were tough.  Too bad.  There must not have been many customers who ordered the Tri-Tips because they tasted dry like it's been sitting there for a long time.  Didn't have the 'heat through' or 'cooked fresh' just for your order feeling.  So, in this food adventure, I was bit let down by this brand new restaurant in our area.  Too bad for those cute cuddly bear decorations.


 So, I was wondering, if you are given all the same food ingredients, would you have prepared them any differently or most of all presented them differently on the plate.  Would the vegetables looked more appetizing than the others if they have been cut or sliced differently? It's a challenge to keep the food taste fresh and cooked per order 'like' when it may be prepared ahead of time. 

Croissants - from Baking with Julia

 Since it's my goal to try as many master chef's formula and practice on techniques, I chose to make Croissants from "Baking with Julia" cookbook.  I prepared the dough around 2 pm, and I just now finished baking them - 10:30 pm.  What interested me in her book's Croissant recipe is the dough process and 'forming' or the 'shaping' technique.  Once the dough is portioned, the triangular shaped dough is pulled and stretched twice its original size.  Then, right before it is rolled into horn shape, a scrap piece of dough shaped into football is placed in the center to help give the baked croissant the plump "belly" look.  While the instruction is very detailed, I missed the "moisten the hands with moist towel" part and pull and stretched the triangle shaped dough.  Although I had 24 chances to do it correctly, I did not find out until I was done.  However, while I was viewing the illustration images, I was wondering the whole time while I was doing mine why or how the chef managed to stretch it so nicely and smoothly without causing the tear.  I also didn't roll the scrap dough into football shape, but I just cut them into equal amount of croissant triangles ready for rolling; then, used it as is.  Luckily the croissant turned out wonderfully.
Today, my kitchen temp is around 67'F.  Rainy day.
Once the dough was ready for the butter block, I divided the dough into halves.
This will allow me to roll the dough within the available work surface' area.
The first group of croissants are baked at 350'F. The base of the triangle is 4-inch wide.  Yielded 14 croissants.  They have beautiful crust. It is crispy with distinct layers.  The croissants are light.  Butter did not leak out much at all.
The second group of croissants are filled with chopped cranberries and raisins.  The base of the triangle is sliced at 6-inch.  Yield: 10.  They were baked at 375'F.  They turned out beautifully as well.
I had a bit of doubt with my dough at the beginning. The recipe called for 1 Cup of Milk for 3-1/2 C of flour.  My dough really felt dry in my mixer.  I added approximately 1/2 C more liquid - just water.  But the dough really felt tough.  I decided to knead the dough regardless and also included pound or slam or slap method for 10 - 15 min.   All that time, I was thinking, may be I should have added the salt after allowing the flour to absorb the liquid first, then, added it.  But, that's not what the instruction says, so I just followed the instruction.  Mixed all ingredients together in the mixer.  But with everything, I need to know how to of recovering/rescue the ingredients when the unexpected sign(s) appears.  So, my manual kneading and slap down of the dough worked to my advantage that my mixer was not able to help with. 
So here it is:  (Click on the image to view other comments)








Saturday, November 20, 2010

My Paczki


This is my photo journal on making of Paczki.  The recipe is from Kat, my friend's family recipe.
I've searched Internet for a while for other PONCHIK recipe, and I am surprised that there are not that many.  It only means that the baker's are doing a great job in Europe making the Paczki, and I can see myself just stroll down my neighborhood and just buy the freshly fried Pazcki instead.  But since I only found one bakery with PONCHIK (it is delicious) where I live, I had to try making this Paczki as well.