Wednesday, November 26, 2008

the tart shell

woopsies, forget to post the tart shell recipes.
here y'all, enjoy!
:D

as taken from smittenkitchen.com

the great unshrinkable sweet tart shell

the great unshrinkable tart shell

I have lamented tart crusts for years, as it seemed that no matter what I did–chill the crusts, weight the crusts, arranged small prayer circles outside the oven–they shrunk on me. No matter how many fingers I crossed, no matter how many Guaranteed No-Fail tricks I auditioned, no matter how many pounds of butter I had sacrificed in my quest, the crust I’d remove from the oven would hold as little as half of the volume of the one I put in, leading to thin tarts and pools of extra filling and oh so very many gray hairs.

tart shell

Which is why today it is taking all of my restraint not to run up that last flight of stairs and shout from my rooftop: I have conquered my tart shells at last, and they shrink no more! … Although I suspect in my neck of this island, that would barely cause an eyebrow to arch.

But it is true, so deliciously true. And before I go any further–you know, into the most awesome stuff I filled this tart crust with–I need to mark this momentous occasion its own post. Go bookmark this one, my friends, because if you’ve ever sobbed at the doorway of your oven, wondering where oh where your tart walls went, you’ve waited too long for this.

happy tart shell

One year ago: Nutmeg Maple Cream Pie
Two years ago: Orangettes

The Great Unshrinkable Sweet Tart Shell
Adapted from Dorie Greenspan

My favorite part about this shell recipe and technique is that it doesn’t require pie weights. How cool is that?!

Makes enough for one 9-inch tart crust

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 cup confectioner’s sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 stick plus 1 tablespoon (9 tablespoons; 4 1/2 ounces) very cold (or frozen) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 large egg yolk

1. Pulse the flour, sugar and salt together in the bowl of a food processor. Scatter the pieces of butter over the dry ingredients and pulse until the butter is coarsely cut in. (You’re looking for some pieces the size of oatmeal flakes and some the size of peas.) Stir the yolk, just to break it up, and add it a little at a time, pulsing after each addition. When the egg is in, process in long pulses–about 10 seconds each–until the dough, which will look granular soon after the egg is added, forms clumps and curds. Just before you reach this stage, the sound of the machine working the dough will change–heads up. Turn the dough out onto a work surface and, very lightly and sparingly, knead the dough just to incorporate any dry ingredients that might have escaped mixing. Chill the dough, wrapped in plastic, for about 2 hours before rolling.

2. To roll the dough: Butter a 9-inch fluted tart pan with a removable bottom. Roll out chilled dough on floured sheet of parchment paper to 12-inch round, lifting and turning dough occasionally to free from paper. (Alternately, you can roll this out between two pieces of plastic, though flour the dough a bit anyway.) Using paper as aid, turn dough into 9-inch-diameter tart pan with removable bottom; peel off paper. Seal any cracks in dough. Trim overhang to 1/2 inch. Fold overhang in, making double-thick sides. Pierce crust all over with fork.

Alternately, you can press the dough in as soon as it is processed: Press it evenly across the bottom and up the sides of the tart shell. You want to press hard enough that the pieces cling to one another, but not so hard that it loses its crumbly texture.

3. Freeze the crust for at least 30 minutes, preferably longer, before baking.

4. To fully bake the crust: Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Butter the shiny side of a piece of aluminum foil (or use nonstick foil) and fit the foil, buttered side down, tightly against the crust. And here is the very best part: Since you froze the crust, you can bake it without weights. Put the tart pan on a baking sheet and bake the crust for 25 minutes.

5. Carefully remove the foil. If the crust has puffed, press it down gently with the back of a spoon. Bake the crust about 10 minutes longer, or until it is firm and golden brown, brown being the important word: a pale crust doesn’t have a lot of flavor. Transfer the pan to a rack and cool the crust to room temperature, and proceed with the rest of your recipe.

Do ahead: The dough can be wrapped and kept in the refrigerator for up to 5 days or frozen for up to 2 months. While the fully baked crust can be packed airtight and frozen for up to 2 months, the flavor will be fresher bake it directly from the freezer, already rolled out.

Walnut Tartlets :D

taken from smittenkitchen.com
oh my gosh this Smittenkitchen lady is a GODDESS of e kitchen!
i love her recipes.
I love the way she documented it.
and I love the way she makes me salivate even though my tummy is telling me that I'm full.
she makes me want to gnaw something. food. haha.
PS: im posting it on my blog for you all to salivate on.
and so that its easier for me to browse on my BlackBerry when I'm buying the ingredients :D
I LOVE HER I LOVE HER I LOVE HER!!

walnut tartlets

walnut tartlets

So, yesterday was a fun and totally out of the ordinary day in the Smitten Kitchen. First, I cooked while wearing lip gloss, which — and I don’t mean to destroy your vision of your blog hostess looking as cute as Giada each day as she creams the sugar with the butter — um, never happens. Oh and second, some really nice young ladies filmed me while I worked.

my favorite

As part of their grant from PBS’s Road Trip Nation, these recent college grads are going around the country talking to people who have travelled down entirely different career paths in hopes to get a clearer picture of what they’d like to do with their lives. How fun is that, right? And they wanted to come visit the Smitten Kitchen and talk to me, which is really funny considering that the answer to “what kind of career path led you here” is, in short: “What’s a career path?” chased with a guffaw, because I haven’t a clue.

wee tartlets

The video will be ready and online somewhere in the next few months, and I’ll be sure in all of my wanting to pull a bag over my head awkwardness to tell you about it anyway. In the meanwhile, since it was, after all, the Smitten Kitchen, I was of course baking something. I didn’t get much in the way of pictures, being busy yammering to the camera and totally forgetting to suck my stomach in and/or hold my shoulders straight (sorry Mom) but I did end up with a delicious dessert I’ve been wanting to check out for eons.

oy

Unfortunately, it was a near disaster. You see, these tartlets bubbled up and over the sides and frankly, all over the place. Thank goodness I had them on the tray or you would have one very cranky blogger on oven-scrubbing duty today. Nevertheless, I wondered who tested this recipe and went back to the original photo of it from an old issue of Bon Appetit to see clear evidence that their caramel rose up over the sides too. Ha, vindicated! Or something.

Alas, this doesn’t leave me in a really good place to give advice. Cons: This bubbles over and will make an awful mess, so you’ll probably want to not only put your tartlets on a tray, but line that tray with foil. Pro: Oh, it tastes amazing. Like, they were all gone by 5 p.m. (I gave four out as goody bags. Gosh people, I’m not that piggish!) And I have missed them dearly all the minutes since.

walnut tartlets

One year ago: Chile-Garlic Egg Noodles
Two years ago: Wild Mushroom Pierogis

Walnut Tartlets
Adapted from Bon Appetit, May 1999

Unfortunately, the cure to the bubbling-over drama is not to fill the shells less (I went about 90 percent full, myself) as the filling shrinks back down and you don’t want a half-empty shell. That said, if you can deal with a little mess, you’ll be duly rewarded with an inordinate amount of deliciousness.

Serves 6

1 recipe Great Unshrinkable Sweet Tart Shell, unbaked
1 cup whipping cream
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup (packed) golden brown sugar
1/4 cup honey
2 teaspoons grated orange peel
1/2 teaspoon whole aniseed (we liked this level, but use 1/4 teaspoon if you’re anise-phobic)
1 3/4 cups walnuts, toasted, chopped
1/2 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 370°F. Cut pastry dough into six pieces, and roll out each one to a 6-inch circle. Transfer to a lightly-buttered 4 1/2-inch-diameter tartlet pan with removable bottom. Press crust onto bottom and up sides of pan; trim overhang to 1/2 inch. Fold overhang in and press, forming double-thick sides. Repeat with remaining dough disks and 5 more pans and prick them all over with a fork.

Freeze crusts for 30 minutes. Lightly butter six pieces of foil and press them tightly against frozen tart shells. Bake crusts for 10 minutes before taking them out, carefully removing the foil, pressing down any pastry that has bubbled up gently with the back of a spoon and baking them for an additional 7 minutes, or until lightly golden at the edges. [More detailed instructions in this post.] Take them out of the oven and let them cool. Increase oven temperature to 400°F.

Meanwhile, make the filling. Stir cream and next 5 ingredients in heavy medium saucepan over medium-low heat until sugar dissolves. Increase heat; boil until mixture bubbles thickly and color darkens slightly, about 6 minutes. Remove from heat; stir in walnuts then salt.

Place crusts on baking sheet lined with foil. Divide filling among crusts. (I had a bit extra. Can we say “best ice cream topping, ever”?) Bake tartlets until filling bubbles thickly and crusts are golden, about 25 minutes. Cool tartlets in pans on rack 5 minutes. Remove pan sides while tartlets are still warm. (Hm, I ignored this and found them easier to remove when they were fully cool, but I’ll let you decide.)

Serve slightly warm or at room temperature.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Tiffanys are the best birthday gift!

Okay.
SO my birthday is a day away. And Louis is having headache as we speak, since my nanny kinda spoiled his birthday surprise for me. He was planning to get me a puppy as a surprise!!
But my nanny accidentally told me last Sunday .. ROFL.

Its a good thing though, because I am not ready to have a puppy yet. My mum will be so pissed! She loves her garden too much..

Imagine what a puppy can do to your beloved garden..

pee here.. poo there.

sigh.

So I told him politely that I can't have a puppy just yet :D

So now he's back to square one.

A day away, and no gift yet. Haahhaa.

Its too bad that he didn't read my blog, cuz I have the list of things that I want posted here. :D

And here's some more of the stuffs that I want from him! haha..
Its the classic light blue box with white ribbon..

With these in it :

Monday, November 10, 2008

My only love sprung from my only hate

No no no, its not a Shakespeare's novel .. Its a story of me and Crocs.

Yes, you read right. Crocs.
I used to hate this shoes so much.
They're ugly, they're fat. Seriously. They looked like Mcdonald's.
Even in very pretty pink shades, they don't look flattering to me..




see my point?
okay lah if some of you find it nice then I cant really blame you cuz fashion is about personal preferences. But to me, its unflattering (especially if you have fat legs like me, *giggles*)

But then I started seeing kids wearing them from malls to malls, and some even wear them to nice restaurants, Both kids and adults (mostly they comes in pairs, i don't know. ugliness need friends i guess?)

And then I saw those kid's crocs got cute pins on them, which I later found out they're called Jibbitz. I don't know what that means. But they're cute!
Still. Cute pins on McDonald's shoes? Still not appealing enough to me.




And then months past by, and during one of my visits to my fave mall, I saw this really pretty lady wearing a really decent crocs shoes. (like pictured below).

Its like flats, and it comes in a really nice shades of pink called Cotton Candy. She wore it with Jibbitz on them, and it looks cute! I don't know if its just pretty lady or the way the shoes fits her outfit, but to tell you the truth, from that day onward, I'm sold.

So out of curiosity, I started browsing crocs.com, and I found some really nice shoes! Some of them don't even have the resemblance of McDonald's shaped shoes. Its really decent. And to think these great looking shoes with the comfort of Crocs? I'll say heck yeah I want one! No no.. let me rephrase that.
I want these! :

Crocs Nightcap
Crocs Malindi

Crocs Lena ( this one is PERFECT FOR WORK!)

AND MY MOST FAVORITE : CROCS BALI , IN YELLOW, RED AND PURPLE :





What?! You've never had the same pair of shoes in different colors before? Puh-leez. Once you like a design, get more than a pair! Because once they're gone, you're going to regret it!

So in conclusion, me and Louis are going to get a pair each, and we're gonna be Crocs Lovers.

Because we're just plain geeky.


Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Fred Flare stuffs!

Hellow..
So sorry for my absence :D been busy with work.
I browsed fred flare just a while ago, and I found some really cute stuffs!

Hello Kitty candy

harajuku lovers perfum (argh I really want them!! Sobs... they don't have it at Jakarta :( )

Handmade Nations ( i love DIY)

Handmade Hellos (I personally think getting handmade cards are way better than fancy cards from the stores :D )

Ginger house gift bag (innit cute!!)

Finger platter (not THATs an idea!)

Domokun Journal (guarantee to scare people who wants to read them! lol)

Cupcake Beanie (heehee...)

Obama is ma man!

Brownies pan.. i want this! graagghh.. i hate indo for not having such cute stuffs available! even if they do, they tend to be so overpriced! :(


I was kinda upset this morning, but I tried not to think about it. See, my sister's graduation is this Saturday. and Louis kinda promised me that he'll come. But as per today, he told me he need to attend his friend's pre-wedding dinner :(.. so he cant come to the graduation (cuz one is at Jakarta, and the other one is at Lampung)
I know I'm not supposed to get upset or anything, but still. he promised. Thats what makes me kinda upset.
I've had some serious problems with people who break promises. And I tried not to break promises with other people too (unless its really urgent)
But heck, maybe its not that big of a deal, maybe its just my girly hormones :D *shrugs*
Im glad he doesn't read my blog (cuz he's too busy to even check his facebook! hahaha)
So I see this blog as my diary :)
A diary filled with lots of cute findings online! hahahaha. Kinda like a catalogue :D
Anyway, thanks for listening (or in this case, reading)

love love!
St.