29 March 2011

log entry, day two. the adventure begins!

friday
friday morning we were up early and on the road by 8.30am to drive to shannon airport to meet up with charles, tayna, erin, tyler and tyler's friend, andrew. we split up into cars for the remainder of the drive to galway. tayna and erin rode with me and mom and the boys had a car to themselves.

once we arrived in galway, we first found the hotel where the stones were staying. they checked in, unloaded their suitcases and then we reconvened in the lobby, piled back into the cars and headed for our hotel. due to a less than detailed map and poor communication from the hotel staff, our hotel wasn't where we were told it would be. after sitting in some serious traffic, we decided to drive back into the city centre, find a place to park and then a place to eat. the king's head was the choice venue and after a server pointed us upstairs, we found comfortable seating for eight. our server was a friendly fellow from donegal and he was good to bring the guinness straight away. once we were full, we walked around the city a bit. we stopped into the tourist office and picked up a few maps before heading back to the carpark. we had to sit in traffic again, however we were successful in finding the hotel by driving a bit further than we did originally. mom checked us in and the wisconsin stones headed back to their hotel to shower and nap before meeting up with young charles for dinner later in the evening. even though i hadn't really done much for the day, i was also feeling exhausted and took a nice, long nap.

the stones were back at 6.30pm and we enjoyed some appetizers while we waited for young charles to arrive at the hotel. when he got there, he shared a few stories from his recent trip to belfast before we headed out for dinner. our plan was to walk the mile (plus) into the city centre and find a place for seafood. however, we passed 'the huntsman' on our way and after a quick look at the menu, we decided it was what we were looking for. dinner was delicious and the conversation was fun. after coffees, banoffee pie, and a selection of ice creams, we walked back to our hotel. the stones departed for their hotel and we headed up to our room.

the three of us were quick to put on our jams and climb into bed.

paddy's day

thursday
in IRE, st. patrick's day is a bank holiday. businesses are closed, schools are closed and everyone observes the day of saint patrick with parades and loads of guinness. because SPD fell on a thursday this year, we had class thursday and friday was our observed holiday at ballymaloe.

thursday was my last morning in the demo kitchen. i was in early to prepare a special dessert for my parents who were coming in for lunch and staying for afternoon demo. i had considered some individual lemon cakes with lemon curd filling, but didn't think it would have fit so nicely into my order of work. so i opted for the chocolate mousse. i put a few fresh raspberries in the bottom of the green glasses i used, poured the chocolate mousse on top and then set them in the fridge to set.

the rest of the morning was spent cooking and preparing lobster, making chips and hollandaise sauce. the humane way to cook lobster is to put the lobsters into a pot of tepid water and then bring it to the boil. the slow rise in temperature puts the lobster into a coma and within minutes it's dead. since we were being resourceful and re-using water, my lobsters didn't have such a humane death. they went head first into the boiling water. i quickly secured the lid and braced myself for the screaming i was sure to hear. when i didn't hear anything, i told myself the little guys had a heart attack which meant a short, painless death. after boiling them in the salt water until they turned red, i transferred them to a pot of court bouillon to finish cooking. they were later removed and placed on a baking tray to cool. while they cooled, i made the hollandaise sauce and cut up potatoes for chips. hollandaise is simply made by whisking up two egg yolks in a cold saucepan, turning on a low heat and then slowly adding butter, a few tablespoons at a time. the chips were parbaked for a few minutes, to soften on the inside, and then rested them on some kitchen paper to dry.

the lobsters were split in half and then the meat was removed and placed into a saucepan with shallots, mushrooms, salt, pepper and cream. when the lobster and cream sauce was of the desired thickness, i removed it from the heat and let it rest. i cooked off the rest of my chips and then plated up one portion of the lobster. i filled a dried out lobster shell with the creamy lobster filling and piled a portion of chips beside it. once my food was tasted and graded, i put the plate in the oven to stay warm until my parents arrived for lunch. when they arrived, i made up a second plate of lobster and then took both plates into the dining room and to the table where my parents had sat. we had a nice visit while they ate and then when they had finished, i went and retrieved their desserts. i think it was a very lovely anniversary meal. :)

i introduced many of my classmates to my parents before we headed into demo. rory made some curry dishes, a poached salmon with spinach and tomato sauce and a few desserts with puff pastry. mom wasn't too interested in tasting any of the dishes except for the rhubarb vol au vole and dad had a plate with everything. the poached salmon was something he thinks he would make.

after demo, dad bought a fish from the local fish supplier while mom helped me pack up for the weekend and then we were off to crosshaven. since it was SPD AND their anniversary, we stopped in cronin's for a pint before heading home. we had a nice chat with sean about black and white lighthouses while we watched denis add green food coloring to the budweiser. when our pint glasses were empty, we headed to the house. we were stopped along the way by larry the census guy. he and dad spent about 5 minutes sorting out where exactly middle lodge was located according to the map that larry had. i was reminded of that great SNL skit with tim meadows and my buddy, christopher walken. 'boy, i really overshot it with that 80!'

dad let me fillet the fish once we got home and unpacked. he removed the head and i did the rest. once the fillets were wrapped up tightly and in the freezer, dad started making dinner.

we didn't have too late of an evening as we were driving to galway early friday morning.

16 March 2011

kaizen

today was day two of our 'business side of food' lecture with darina's sister, blathnaid bergin. we spent the first part of the morning reviewing what we discussed a few weeks ago when she first visited with us and then she talked about value added tax and kitchen management systems before we broke for coffee at 11am. when we resumed from our break, we looked at kitchen management in action and food costing. we did a few food costing exercises (my math is much better than i give myself credit for!) and watched at a gordan ramsay 'kitchen nightmares' dvd before lunch.

i was in charge of serving soup for lunch, so i quickly made for the dining room at 1pm. i ended up with the bread basket and i went around to each table, offering bread and chatting with my classmates. lunch today was corned beef and cabbage (served for the sake of all the non-irish) and loads of delicious sides. i was slightly surprised to see my tart on the dessert table next to the poached rhubarb and pear tarts. i made a point of tasting it (since i did go to all the work of saving it the day before) and it was actually quite good. so good that i had seconds. :)

the afternoon resumed at ten to two as pam was drawing names for cooking times and kitchen assignments for our exam in two weeks. i will be cooking at 8am on thursday, the 31st.

blathnaid picked up with portion control, waste management and talking about 'the business of ageing'. i was most intrigued with the whole business of ageing, what blathnaid called 'turning silver into gold'. she had attended a conference recently that looked at the group of men and women who are 50 years of age and older. she explained that they are a market that is being completely ignored and told us that there are endless business opportunities for them in the food industry. one of the things that was unsettling was that she said the 50 and older generation does not like to be looked at as 'old' and they are irritated and turned off when people refer to them as that. however, when i asked her if there was a consensus of how that group would like to be seen instead, she didn't have (in my opinion) an answer. it was interesting to hear some of my older classmates talk about experiences they have had with advertising (and how 90% of it is aimed to the 25-35 year olds) and even at ballymaloe. it was funny to hear some of the assumptions they had about ballymaloe compared to the ones some of the younger students had as well.

we wrapped up the lecture with a case study (about a past student who opened a cafe outside of dublin and had enlisted blathnaid's help) and a short evaluation of blathnaid's time with us.

as it was only 4.30pm when we got back to the pink cottage and the day was absolutely beautiful, elisa, rose, charlotte, minnie and i went for an adventure walk. we started out along the school road and then ended up in the fields. the scenery was stunning and our chat was light and fun.

i started straight into my menu and ingredients list for the final exam when we returned to our cottage a little over an hour later. i decided on starting with a salad of crozier blue cheese, pears and spiced pecans, a main of lamb tagine with medjool dates, sides of peas with coconut and coriander, cous cous with apricot and pistachio nuts, yoghurt and banana raita and ending with yoghurt and cardamom cream with pomegranate seeds flavored with rose blossom water. should be good to quite good.

i finished my order of work for the morning and minnie's just served up some french onion soup. elisa made a carrot cake for dessert, so i figure it'll be a late night tonight.

that's going to leave a mark

tuesday
after my less than stellar morning in demo kitchen monday, i was in the kitchen tuesday morning by 8am. i started my puff pastry dough, refrigerated it and then made a shortcrust pastry and had that resting in the fridge before 8.30am.

in addition to my pastries, my work order for the day included a plate of smoked local fish, accompanied by homemade horseradish sauce, a sweet dill mayonnaise and pickled cucumbers, and a seville orange bakewell tart. since i didn't have to do anything with the smoked fish, i made the mayonnaise, horseradish sauce and pickled cucumbers and let them cool in the fridge. i rolled out my puff pastry, put it back in the fridge and then got my shortcrust pastry and lined my flan ring. my first roll out was a bit shy for the 12" tin, so i folded it back up and re-rolled it. much better the second time around! i banged it into the oven to blind bake and then made the frangipane filling. that was set aside so i could roll out my puff pastry again (talk about a laborious task!). my pastry crust was taking it's sweet time browning up and just as i was ready to give it another 5 minutes (on top of the 25 minutes it had already been in), sorca let me know it looked baked enough. it was awkward to remove from the oven and as i struggled to get a good grip on the tin without the bottom pushing through, the tin fell on my wrist. i had to decide between letting the tin continue to burn me as i moved it over to the counter, or to drop the tin and end up with a destroyed tart crust. i opted for the latter and as the tin fell from my hands, i let out a frustrated 'rats!' and drew immediate attention from my classmates and instructor. i don't remember how i got over to the sink, but before i could do much more than wince at the pain, my wrist was under the tap and cold water was rushing to relieve the initial burning. i kept it there for about five minutes and then sorca was rubbing fresh aloe on it to ease the tenderness. the tart was a disaster. the sides had completely crumbled while the base miraculously stuck to the bottom tin disc. sorca, in an effort to cheer me up, came up with a creative way to save the tart. i rolled out more dough and lined the sides of the tin. we decided that the sides wouldn't take that long to bake and that they would connect with the bottom crust at some point. i spread the orange marmalade over the bottom of the tart, carefully covered it with the frangipane mixture and put it back into the oven. it had only been in for two minutes when sorca came back into the kitchen and let me know that she had been talking with another instructor and they felt it would benefit from some lattice work on top. i let sorca remove the tart from the oven and then i tediously rolled out more dough, cut it into semi-thick strips and then made a lattice design on top of the tart. by 11.30am, it was back in the oven for good.

i quickly retrieved my puff pastry from the fridge, gave it the final two rolls and then put it back. i plated up my smoked fish plate, consisting of eel, salmon, mackerel, tuna and mussels, added my cucumber pickle, sweet dill mayonnaise and horseradish sauce and presented it to sorca to taste.

i forgot to mention that steak was the main dish for the day and even though my partner had picked the steak to make, we both had to cook our own steaks. i let sorca know that i would be preparing mine medium-rare and then let it sizzle on the grill pan for the recommended 3 minutes on each side. i plated it up with onion rings and drizzled salsa verde on top and called it good. sorca tasted it and then let me take it into the dining room to eat. since my tart was still baking, sorca let me know she'd keep an eye on it and remove it when it was done.

after lunch i went back to the pink cottage and changed out of my stinky whites and into comfortable clothes. i laid down for a few minutes before i had to be back for afternoon demo.

since darina is in new york for SPD, rory was once again our demo leader. lucky us! he first went over how to remove lamb kidneys from the fat and membrane they are found in before starting in on the cooking. he made a warm salad of lamb kidneys, straw potatoes and caramelized shallots, a warm salad of lamb kidneys with oyster mushrooms, oyster mushrooms with marjoram, a cabbage, pea, cumin, curry leaves and mustard seed salad, a tarte francaise, jalousie, eccles cakes and croissants. he also demonstrated the humane way to cook lobster and several ways to prepare it.

i had an after demo duty of putting away dishes, so after tasting i joined a few of my other classmates in the larder and started stacking dishes and returning them to their homes. elisa and i went for a walk once i got back to the cottage and our chat mostly revolved around our upcoming exams.

dinner was some tuna in olive oil and frozen green peas. i spent the evening filing and choosing recipes for my final exam (and spreading aloe on my burn). i think it was after eleven when i finally crawled under the covers and fell asleep.

14 March 2011

i get knocked down, but i get up again

this week i'm in the demo kitchen which is quite different from the other kitchens. there are only six of us in this kitchen which makes us a true team. pam is our instructor which is a real treat.

i got into the kitchen at 8am so i could get a loaf of granary bread checked off my technique sheet and find my way around the kitchen. it turned out to be a bit of wasted energy as i started out using the wrong flour for my bread and then had a hard time trying to find ingredients. pam came in at 9am and gave us the rundown of the kitchen and then let us back to our cooking. in addition to my bread, i was cooking roast duck with onion and sage stuffing and bruschetta with mushrooms and parmesan.

the duck turned out perfectly aside from the fact that i was rushing to carve it at 1pm. the bruschetta was lovely and i was pleased that i even got to make the pesto to go on top of it. my granary loaf was questionable since i used a tin that was too small. when i removed it from the warming oven, the dough was pouring over the sides of the tin. i quickly squished it back in and was ready to transfer it to another tin but pam told me to put it the oven. to her surprise, and mine, it turned out beautifully.


i flew through lunch and was back in demo without getting my anticipated walk in. not the end of the world, but a bit of a bummer. darina popped her head in to thank everyone for their participation in friday night's pub quiz. the money raised was going to support her india fund. we students contributed six hundred euros which darina/ballymaloe are going to match euro for euro. not a bad collection! rory ran demo again today and after showing us how to cut our own steaks, he made a plate of smoked fish with horseradish sauce, a sweet dill mayonnaise, pan-grilled steak with bearnaise sauce and chips, pan-grilled steak with chipotle butter, chargrilled sirloin steak with salsa verde, steak au poivre, pan-grilled steak with roast red peppers, anchoide and rocket, ballymaloe spiced beef, spiced tomato sauce, mushroom sauce, ratatouille nicoise, pommes allumettes, cauliflower cheese, italian cauliflower fritters, rocket and olive salad, cabbage, sultana and fennel salad, normandy pear tart, apricot and frangipane tart, a bakewell tart, a pine kernel tart, a blood orange tart and a seville orange bakewell tart.

after struggling to keep my eyes open through the first half of demo, i took a nap after we were dismissed for the day. i got up when charlotte came in to ask me if i wanted a cup of tea. emily's mom and a friend were visiting as they had come down to ballymaloe for the afternoon. they chatted a bit about lunch and demo and then were on their way back up to dublin.

i did some filing, completed my order of work and am still contemplating on my menu for my final exam in three weeks. i have until thursday to finalize my dishes, complete my grocery list and order of work. we have a wine exam on wednesday the 23rd, cooking exams wednesday the 30th and thursday the 31st and written exams on april 1st. can't believe my twelve weeks are nearly up!

whatever you do in life will be insignificant

saturday
after our late night at the pub, we all enjoyed a lie in and lazy saturday morning. by 10.30am, the six of us were eating elisa's french toast casserole and watching an episode of 'entourage'. we had decided to head into cork for the day and by 12.30pm the six of us plus two other classmates were divided up into two cars and heading into the city. charlotte, emily, rose and phoenix stopped in cobh on the way into cork while elisa, connie, minnie and i headed straight in. we visited the english market, enjoying the sausage sandwiches at o'flynn's and the delicious sides at the mediterranean stall. elisa and i could not sample enough of the glorious green dip made of ewe's milk cheese, basil, garlic and olive oil. and the sample of parmesan cheese and figs was divine.

we wandered a bit down patrick street before heading to the 'liberty grill' for lunch. i had suggested it but didn't want to talk it up too much and have the girls be disappointed. fortunately, everyone loved what they ordered as well as the restaurant itself. completely satisfied, we paid the bill and headed to marks & spencers to do a quick grocery shop before meeting up with charlotte, rose, emily and phoenix at the hot chocolate shop. we ran into phoenix on our way to the hot chocolate shop and found out that the girls were shopping. we opted to head back to school as the thought of naps sounded wonderful.

one of our classmates was celebrating her birthday saturday evening and had organized an outing into cork to go dancing. minnie, charlotte and emily were looking forward to a night out while elisa, connie and i decided to spend the evening at the cinema instead. we saw 'no strings attached' which was entertaining but not something i would see again or recommend. our evening ended around midnight and the dancing crew got in just before 4am.

sunday
i woke sunday morning to sunshine streaming into our room. after a quick breakfast, i was dressed and off for a long walk. i walked part of the loop, heading down a few side roads just to see some of the spring lambs. the view was so incredible that i had to stop several times just to soak it up and commit it to my memory. i made my way back to the school a little over an hour later and found my cottagemates up and discussing the previous evening. i laughed as they filled me in on all the drama and funny events from their night out.

elisa got back from church shortly after two and the six of us plus rose and nicole piled into two cars and headed to lismore for afternoon lunch at o'brien's chop house. while the drive made me carsick, the views were just incredible. we arrived in lismore around half three, parked and walked two blocks to the restaurant. justin greeted us as we entered the chop house and showed us to our table. we had a lovely lunch that included a starter and main and for some, dessert. some of the girls were looking forward to the traditional roast beef but because it had sold completely out, they enjoyed steaks instead. connie and i had the pollock and garlic mash which was quite nice.

we left lismore and got back to ballymaloe shortly before 7pm. i did a load of laundry and my order of work for monday while watching 'remember me'.

carmina burana

i didn't sleep well thursday evening and i think it had something to do with the two (wonderful) cups of coffee i had on our field trip. after tossing and turning, i finally fell asleep around 4am only to wake to my alarm at 6.45am. but it was friday and that alone was enough to motivate me to get up and out of bed.

stephen was already in the kitchen when i arrived at 8.30am. he was making a loaf of granary bread, which he wanted to get out of the way before starting in on the items he was to make for the morning. i was making pears poached in saffron syrup, a mild madras curry with fresh spices and sue's health bars. the pears needed to be served completely chilled, so i made them first so they could hang out in the fridge while i made the curry. the curry was tedious as i had to cut the lamb from the shoulder and then trim off the fat. once i finished that, i sliced up the onions and cooked them with some crushed garlic. i browned the lamb in ginger and then added it to the onions, added nut milk, fresh spices, tumeric and sugar and whacked the dish into the oven for the required hour cooking time.

the biscuits i was making had been made by my cooking partner the week before and they intrigued me. i was a bit skeptical that 'health' was part of the name, but after looking through the recipe i noted that these bars didn't contain nearly as much butter as some of the biscuit recipes. as i collected my ingredients, sue (one of the instructors) came up to me and told me that that recipe was going be published in a magazine and that someone from the school would be photographing the bars later in the day. 'make them lovely', she advised. no pressure, right? i labored longer than usual on the preparation and then put them in the oven. when they were done 35 minutes later, i quickly cut them and left them to cool. the outcome was delicious and sue even sent a plate of them home for me and my cottage.

my curry came out of the oven just before noon and after bringing up the seasoning a bit, i was happy with it. i plated it up with some basmati rice and a few wedges of lime. i pulled my pears out of the fridge, arranged two very neatly in a bowl and then spooned some of the saffron syrup over them. my instructor tasted and gave me positive reviews. i took my pears out into the dining room and dumped my curry into the communal bowl of curry, tidied my work section and headed off to lunch.

afternoon demo started with a visit from a past student who had interned at the american academy in rome. she spent ten minutes sharing her experience with us and i think all 62 of us were furiously scribbling details so we could look into the internship later. it sounded like an amazing opportunity. darina thanked the girl for coming and then rory began demo. he started by making a variety of meringues (almond with chocolate and rum cream, chocolate with chocolate and rum cream and chocolate wafers, toffee gateau with caramel shards and irish coffee) and them moved on to bruschetta with mushrooms and slivers of parmesan, goat cheese and rocket bruschetta with tomato and chilli jam, crostinis with parma ham, goat cheese and confiture d'oignons, tomato and chilli jam, roast stuffed duck with brambly apple sauce, roast duck with traditional potato stuffing, roast duck with sage and onion stuffing, duck with orange, red cabbage and mashed parsnips. my duty for the day was to serve after demo, so i manned the bruschetta and divided up all the crostini plates.

elisa and i went for a walk when we were dismissed from demo, just a quick 30 minute stroll to get some fresh air. one of our classmates had organized a pub quiz at the goal post pub down the road for the evening, so when we got back to our cottage after our walk we showered and had naps. we headed to the pub shortly before eight and quickly found a table near a booth of our classmates. elisa, charlotte, emily and i were on a team together and while we didn't win, we did know more answers than we thought and had an absolute blast.

the 'mothatruckers': charlotte, emily, brij and elisa


minnie and connie, members of 'quiz in my pants'


matt, mary, shruti and liz, team 'sore losers' and the pub quiz winners

10 March 2011

irish artisans

today we went on a school field trip. the 62 (minus a few) of us met in the school car park at 7.45am, boarded a coach bus and set off to meet some of the amazing artisans who are making a difference for the food industry here in ireland.

our first stop was the belvelly smoke house near cobh. here, frank hederman smokes organic salmon, mackerel, mussels and eel as well as porridge and butter. he explained the process of cold smoking and hot smoking and the difference between the two.





at 9.15 we got back on the bus and drove to mahon point to experience the mahon point farmers' market. darina's son-in-law is the driving force behind this successful famers' market which is only open on thursdays. here, local artisans and specialist food producers sell a variety of food - free-range meat and poultry, local fish, organic fruit, vegetables and herbs, cured meats, farmhouse cheeses, herbs, jams, relishes, pickles, breads, cakes and biscuits. we had an hour to explore the stalls and try some of the different fare. i had a hazelnut americano from o'conaill's hot chocolate stall and a bowl of chicken curry from green saffron (which is a spice company run by a past ballymaloe student). the mediterranean stall (below) had the most beautiful olives, sundried tomatoes and mozzarella cheeses and the guy working there was happy to give me and hazel a hard time.


we left mahon point at 11am and headed to cashel blue cheese in co. tipperary. award winning farmhouse cheese makers jane and louis grubb created cashel blue cheese in 1984. their unique product is (impressively) made entirely by hand from whole un-homogenised cows' milk.

we had a proper cheese tasting of three different cheeses (a 7 week old, a 9 week old and a 10 week old) and a tour of the cheese making facilities.



we left cashel blue at 2.30pm and took the scenic route to lismore. the views of the irish countryside were just incredible. at one point, our bus driver stopped so we could see the three counties - cork, limerick and tipperary - that meet up with each other.

in lismore, we broke up into two groups. the group i was in went to the summer house first. it's an adorable tea shop owned and run by a past ballymaloe student, owen madden, who gave us a tour of the kitchen and shared his business experience with us.



we thanked owen and walked a few doors down to o'brien's chop house. o'brien's is owned by justin and jenny green and was opened in 2009, which was quite risky considering the recession going on. his advice to those of us wanting to open our own restaurant was to make sure we had good ambiance, good food and a good location.




justin talked about his two favorite events at o'brien's, st. patrick's day and christmas eve. on both holidays, they have a set dinner menu and then after eating, a piano is moved outside onto the patio and a singalong session takes place. events, he told us, that are well loved by the locals and tourists alike. o'brien's also holds a beer and curry fest on the last friday of every month.

from o'brien's, we walked down the street to mcgrath's, the lismore butcher shop. michael mcgrath, who owns the shop, and his son gave us a tour of the shop and the slaughter room. not a business i would want to get into, but extremely interesting to learn about (in my opinion).



we got back on the bus a final time, leaving lismore around 5.45pm and returning to ballymaloe an hour later. while i had listened to my ipod earlier in the day, i gave my attention to my seatmate, matt, and spent the ride home listening to stories of his travels to south america. he had me laughing, asking questions and feeling pangs of jealousy. i think i know where i need to visit next...

09 March 2011

eating with your hands

the night nurse i took before bed last night allowed me to enjoy a deep sleep, but i woke up this morning sniffling and coughing, so i figure i still have another day or two before i'm feeling 'well' again. i hope.

in the morning lecture today, darina and rory covered canapes, finger food and tasty bites. they made marinated feta, sundried tomato and olive skewers, anchovy and sesame seed straws, tiny smoked salmon spirals, thai curry bites, tiny shepard's pies, teeny yorkshire puds with rare roast beef and horseradish sauce, mini cottage pies with garlic butter, spicy indian meatballs with pomegranate and coriander raita, sweet pea guacamole on warm tortillas, lamb on rosemary skewers, pork satay, a spicy peanut satay sauce, a variety of quail eggs dishes, scrambled eggs with smoked eel on melba toast, tiny fish kebabs, cheat's tarts with goat cheese, ragged filo tartlets, a canape of fish and chips and grilled sourdough bread with garlic, olive oil and sea salt. it was all plated up beautifully and looked amazing. due to my lack of senses at the moment, i passed on tasting. instead, charlotte and i ran to cloyne over lunch to get more night nurse for our cottage.

afternoon lecture was all about sushi. a former ballymaloe student, shermin mustafa, taught us how to make the sushi rice and how to roll sushi as well as how to create scattered sushi and thin japanese omelets. she also made four turkish recipes as her dad is turkish. i so wished i could have tasted them because they looked amazing! one was called 'lamajun' which is a sort of lamb pizza. first it's cooked in a heavy skillet for a few minutes and then put in the oven under the grill for another 3-5 minutes. the dough is made from yogurt and flour and i bet would be good made on its own and used for dipping, nibbling, etc. the other dishes she made were a dolma, merjemec chorba and turkish bulghur.

once we had been dismissed for the day, charlotte, rose and i went for a stroll around the school gardens. the daffodils are up and they are gorgeous! such a happy flower, really. it was nice to enjoy the fresh air and the beautiful evening. when we got back to our cottage, i tackled the huge pile of recipes i had been meaning to file since last friday. it only took the better part of an hour. rumor has it that when we finish up the 12 week course, we get a bound book with all our recipes. if that's true, i feel like this filing has been a waste of time!

elisa is making dinner tonight - chicken, broccoli and rice casserole. ah, lovely comfort food. :)

08 March 2011

a lesson in patience

today was my first day back in the kitchen after being out sick yesterday and all weekend. actually, i probably should have heeded my mom's suggestion and stayed home one more day, but it's hard to miss any school when so much is packed into a single day. you can't afford to be sick at ballymaloe.

mom dropped me off at ballymaloe at quarter to eight this morning and helped me carry my bags to the pink cottage. elisa, my roommate, greeted us but sounded awful. unfortunately, she's caught a bug as well. :( she and i chatted briefly about the weekend and the exam review that had taken place monday evening (apparently it was a 2+ hour session with some pretty ridiculous questions). i made her some tea, shared some of my herbal goodies with her and then headed off to the kitchen.

my partner this week is stephen o'brien and he is a dream! since i had missed demo monday afternoon, i didn't know what any of the dishes were supposed to look like as a final product. stephen had emailed me a list of our menu items and the ones that he wanted to make, so i was scheduled to make oeufs mimosa salad with homemade mayonnaise, tomato and basil salad with ballymaloe french dressing, mushroom and caramelized onion salad and the ballymaloe vanilla ice cream. i started out by boiling 4 eggs for the mimosa salad and making the mayonnaise. once we've made the mayonnaise by hand, and have an instructor sign off on the technique, we're allowed to use a food processor to make it later on. i was very grateful for that today! while i was adding in the oil, one of the instructors came over to ask how i was feeling and to let me know that i had missed out on making butter on monday. bummed, i asked if it was something i could do again. she smiled, disappeared for a moment and then reappeared with a bucket of cream. so, i added 'making butter' to my order of work. my mayonnaise came together beautifully and i covered it with cling film and set it under my work station, out of the way. then i was on to the ice cream. not overly complicated, just tedious. especially the part where the sugar and water boil to the 'thread' stage. it happens very quickly and if you miss it, the sugar and water begin to caramelize. i hadn't factored redoing that step of making ice cream into my order of work, but i should have. my sugar and water caramelized right before my eyes and just as my instructor came over to check on me. we decided (she advised) that i was using a burner that was too hot. she poured water into my caramel goop so we could boil the pan clean and start over. 10-15 minute set back, not the end of the world.

the second time was a success and soon i had a kenmore whipping my cream into a softly whipped state while i used a hand mixer to incorporate the thready sugar water into my whisked egg yolks and vanilla. when the sugar water and egg yolks were a thick, creamy consistency, i folded in the cream, poured the mixture into ramekins and put the lot into the freezer. ice cream, done.

i cleaned up my section and gathered the ingredients for the mushroom and caramelized onion salad. i sliced up the onions and set them aside as stephen was using our large heavy bottom saucepan at the moment. i began to slice mushrooms and thought i was doing a great job until my instructor appeared and let me know my slices were much too thick. she went out into the larder and came back over to me with a handful of button mushrooms and had me practice after she did a quick demo for me. i will get it right one of these days! i sliced up three mushrooms in front of her before she was convinced i had the hang of it and added them to the mound i would later be sauteing.

while all the mushroom slicing was going on, stephen had finished with the saucepan, washed it out and returned it to the stove for me. i know, he's great! i dropped in two tablespoons of olive oil, let the pan get hot and then added my onions. caramelizing onions at ballymaloe is an art and one that takes time. because of the few setbacks i had, my onions were started a bit late and ended up a bit rushed. i found myself trying to finish up and plate the mimosa salad while i was caramelizing the onions and sauteing the mushrooms, so i gave up on the mushrooms and focused on the salad and onions for the moment. the salad consists of hard boiled eggs, yolks removed and peeled shrimp placed in the yolk holes which are covered with a mayonnaise and egg yolk mixture and then covered with a thinned out mayonnaise dressing. delicious, right? yeah, not something i will probably ever make again.

with the mimosa salad finished and plated and the onions finally caramelized, i concentrated on sauteing my mushrooms. another challenge of cooking and not completely recovered from being sick is that i had no sense of taste or smell. definitely hard to season my salads! i did my best to cover each batch of mushrooms with salt, pepper, garlic and a bit of lemon juice but i'm not sure how accurate i was. the mushrooms had to cool after being cooked, so i transferred them to a glass bowl and set them aside. i turned to focus on the tomato and basil salad and realized that i had used every spoon in the drawer and had a nice pile of bowls and saucepans on the stove. before i could decide which pile to take to the sink first, stephen had swooped in and was on his way to wash them up. what a star! i sighed, scolded myself for not being more on top of my cleaning and started slicing tomatoes. fortunatey, the tomato and basil salad is fantastically simple and all i had to do was season and dress the tomatoes before i called the salad done. a quick check of my watch and i had to do a double take. one o'clock? really? my slowest day in the kitchen so far. ugh. i plated my mushroom and caramelized salad, added it to the collection of plates holding my other two salads, pulled a ramekin of my ice cream from the freezer and called my instructor over to taste it all.

aside from needing a bit more seasoning on the mushrooms, everything turned out well. i actually got the seasoning perfect on the tomatoes which was complete luck. while my instructor recorded my scores, i moved my salads onto serving plates so they could be eaten for lunch. there wasn't much to tidy in my section because stephen had taken care of everything, so i packed up my knives, organized my recipes and headed back to the cottage. elisa was up but still feeling awful. i told her about my slow morning, changed out of my whites and went for a short walk. my route took me down the side of the school and back behind the greenhouses. it felt good to breathe in the cold air and watch the pigs move around in their pen. i walked for twenty minutes and then headed back up to the school for demo.

darina, who is recently back from india, shared with us some indian cuisine. she started off with a ciabatta bread (i know, not indian) and then moved on to a mild madras curry with fresh spices, hot chilli sauce, a grape raita, grape and melon with mint salad, melon sorbet with lime syrup, campari and blood orange sorbet, tamarind chutney with bananas, poori, naan, chapatis, lassi, pears poached in a saffron syrup, agen stuffed prunes with rosewater cream and yoghurt and cardamom cream with pomegranate seeds perfumed with rose blossom water. gillian, one of the instructors here, was assisting darina and had a hard time doing anything 'right' by darina's standards. she does an amazing job setting up all the ingredients for the dishes darina puts together and is always thinking four or five steps of darina and anticipating her next three moves. it was hard for me to see her so under-appreciated today.

since i couldn't taste anything and was still feeling lousy, i headed straight home after demo.

my hot water bottle is full, i have a pile of blankets on my bed and my night nurse ready is to knock me out for the evening. i'm looking forward to a good sleep. :)