Saturday, June 11, 2016

New Pastries at La Bonne Vie: Tarts

I love tarts.  To be exact, I love making tarts/tartlets.  Just throwing that out there.

Not gonna lie, I've never liked pies as much as I do tarts, both in making them and eating them.

There's just something about tarts that I adore.  Maybe it's their sophisticated, sharp lines.  Maybe it's the vastness of their possible designs, shapes, and flavor combos that are limited only by one's imagination.  Or maybe it's just because they're so darn cute and pretty.

So not surprisingly, when Chef told me to come up with new pastries for La Bonne Vie, I ended up making tarts.

There are a few more, but these are our most popular ones so far.


Nutella Pyramid: Nutella mousse with salted caramel cremeux insert, on chocolate tart shell filled with crispy praline feuilletine.  This is actually a tart version of the Whiskey Hazelnut Dome I made in school and for my Chef de Partie tasting.  Nutella fans, rejoice.


Blueberry Tart: Tart shell filled with vanilla pastry cream, topped with generous mound of blueberries. Finishing with apricot glaze and edible blue luster powder gave it a metallic sheen, making them look like a mound of black pearls.  So pretty!


Hazelnut-Raspberry Tart: Chocolate tart shell filled with Nutella cream, topped with fresh raspberries and hazelnuts.  I thought that the Nutella and raspberries seem like an odd pairing;  until I worked the crepe station at a banquet one day.  While there, I've noticed that more than half the guests asked to have their crepes filled with Nutella and raspberries, a combination which I found weird.  Turns out that it's actually quite tasty.

Tiramisu Tart (on the left): This is our most popular tart.  Tiramisu mousse (mascarpone mousse spiked with Kahlua and rum), with a thin sponge soaked in coffee syrup inside, on tart shell filled with chocolate cremeux.  One of the sales girls commented that this one is her favorite, because she LOVES anything coffee.

Culinary field is an extremely demanding career, both physically and mentally.  The hours are mercilessly long, all of which, for the most part, is spent standing up, while doing rigorous tasks that can potentially cause joint damage.  We are under the constant scrutiny of health inspectors, food critics, and guests/customers, who are more than happy to criticize the smallest mistakes or flaws in our product.  But it's positive comments like these that gives those working in the culinary the strength to keep going, that make working in such conditions worth it.

No comments:

Post a Comment