From Publishers Weekly
With an air of authority and an enthusiastic tone, Yard sets out to prove that pastry making need not be a complicated affair. Yard, the executive pastry chef at Spago Beverly Hills, has an easy didactic style that comes across in her spunky text and straightforward recipes. She divides her book into 12 master recipe chapters (such as Ganache, Vanilla Sauce and Brioche) instead of sticking to the conventional sections on cookies, cakes and tarts. This refreshing approach brings to light the relationships between certain recipes-how, for example, the chocolate and cream in the Master Ganache can be transformed into Campton Place Hot Chocolate, with minor adjustments in ingredient quantities and cooking methods. Yard also is generous with variations, offering a handful of optional approaches to most recipes. Her desire is to teach the reader the fundamentals, and then apply them to more complicated (but often very doable) dishes. Headnotes are peppered with encouragements like "Remember, whisking by hand burns calories." Sometimes, the text can become cumbersome with scientific explanations, such as the pH scale discussion in the Curds chapter. But as Yard explains in her introduction, "I show you how the ingredients interact with one another, so you'll know the reasons behind the steps you're following." A wide range of recipes makes the book accessible to all levels, allowing novices to become comfortable with pastry basics and professionals to combine multiple recipes to create more complicated impressive confections. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"The tone of Sherry Yard's book makes her feel like a new best friend who just happens to be the pastry chef at the most famous restaurant in tinsletown.....she takes the well-codified genre of desserts and sets it down in a new way, using recipes and techniques as building blocks....I'm not a pastry chef, but I find this volume almost empowering" -- Gourmet
Review
"The tone of Sherry Yard's book makes her feel like a new best friend who just happens to be the pastry chef at the most famous restaurant in tinsletown.....she takes the well-codified genre of desserts and sets it down in a new way, using recipes and techniques as building blocks....I'm not a pastry chef, but I find this volume almost empowering" -- Gourmet
Book Description
The Secrets of Baking is a comprehensive primer that guides the cook through the world of baked goods and other desserts, from time-honored classics of the French patisserie to the inspired and fanciful creations that made Spago the famous restaurant it is today. At the same time, it advances a radically new understanding of these recipes, one that will give the baker greater flexibility and confidence in the kitchen. Instead of grouping desserts into traditional categories (pies, cakes, cookies), Sherry Yard arranges them around crucial master recipes. Starting with these recipes -- simple, basic guidelines for making caramel, chocolate sauce, lemon curd, pound cake, and brioche, to name just a few -- Yard shows the cook how to create dozens of variations. Knowing how ingredients interact opens the door to a multitude of baking possibilities. For example, cream puff dough forms the foundation for éclairs, profiteroles, and the caramel-coated tower the French call croquembouche, but understanding how and why it behaves the way it does allows the cook to create deep-fried beignets, mascarpone-filled cannolis, or simmering-hot dumplings. This authoritative, friendly bake-shop bible contains fascinating mini-lessons on food science, illuminating bits of baking history, and time-saving tips. Newcomers to the world of baking will feel at ease with such simple, homey desserts as Banana Bread and Mississippi Mud Pie, and elaborate show-stoppers like Chocolate Brioche Sandwich with Espresso Gelato and Blackberry-Lime-Filled Doughnuts with Blackberry Sorbet and Berries will transform amateur bakers into expert pastry chefs.
About the Author
Sherry Yard is the executive pastry chef at Wolfgang Pucks restaurant Spago Beverly Hills. She has created desserts for the Grammy Awards, the Emmy Awards, and the Academy Awards. She has been featured in Vogue, Bon Appétit, Gourmet, Food & Wine, and the Los Angeles Times and has appeared many times on national television, including ABC, CBS, NBC, and Access Hollywood.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
GanacheWhen I was in cooking school, I loved showing off my newly acquired culinary skills in front of my sisters. One winter break, my sister Laurie was baking a birthday cake for a friend in my mother"s wood-paneled Brooklyn kitchen. Being a typical culinary student, I was appalled to see her reach for a can of ready-made frosting. "Why don"t you just make ganache?" I asked in my best I-know-something- that-you-don"t-know tone. "What"s that?" she asked. Seizing the opportunity to impress my sister with a basic pastry technique, I looked around the kitchen for chocolate and cream. I heated the cream in the microwave and poured it over the chocolate. From those humble ingredients emerged a luxurious, decadent frosting. She was amazed. What sounded exotic and mysterious was so easy that even her sister could do it!While it does sound exotic, basic ganache is made with just two ingredients: chocolate and cream. By varying techniques and tweaking ingredients, you can turn basic ganache into a truffle, a glaze, a frosting, a mousse, a tart, a warm drink, or a frozen pop. Adjusting the proportion of chocolate and cream changes the density of the finished product. More cream makes it thinner and lighter and more chocolate makes it thicker and denser. You can also manipulate ganache by changing its temperature. It becomes thinner as it heats and thicker as it cools. The idea of mixing two ingredients seems simple. But mixing chocolate and cream is equivalent to mixing oil and water, which can"t normally be done. This process of mixing two unmixable ingredients is called emulsification. Remember the school science fair? Wasn"t there always a kid with an oil and water display? He"d plop some oil into the water, but instead of dissolving, it would float to the top. What that kid didn"t know is that oil and water actually can be mixed, with a little help from heat and agitation. The emulsification that results in ganache combines the fat in chocolate (cocoa butter) with the water in cream. To accomplish this, you must first liquefy the fat. Hot cream is combined with the chocolate, melting the fat into liquid form. Stirring breaks down the fat into microscopic droplets, small enough to be suspended within the water. Whipping and heavy cream may be used interchangeably to make ganache. They differ in the amount of butterfat they contain. As a general rule, the higher the fat content of the cream, the richer the finished ganache will be.Temperature is an important factor in the emulsification of ganache. If the temperature is not controlled carefully, the result will not be smooth. The optimal emulsification temperature for ganache is 90° to 110°F. If the temperature rises above 110°F, the cocoa butter gets too hot. Droplets of fat will pool together and rise to the surface, separating from the mixture. When this occurs, the ganache is referred to as "broken." Ganache can also be lumpy if the chocolate is not chopped into very fine pieces before being combined with the hot cream. If the chocolate pieces are larger than 1/4 inch, they will not melt completely and the resulting ganache will have lumps. Lumpy ganache can be repaired by being reheated. Reheating, however, can easily cause the fat to overheat, pool together, and break the ganache. After the cream is poured over the chocolate to melt the cocoa butter, the mixture is set aside to warm undisturbed for a minute and then stirred in a slow, circular motion. Steady agitation is essential in reducing the fat to tiny droplets. Care must be taken to resist excessive beating, which can bring the temperature of the fat below 90°F too quickly, producing ganache with a grainy texture.REPAIRING A BROKEN OR GRAINY GANACHEIf your ganache looks broken or feels grainy, there is still hope for it. To repair a broken ganache, divide it in half. Warm one half over a double boiler to a temperature of 130°F. The fat will melt and pool at this temperature, making the mixture thinner. Cool the remaining ganache to 60°F by stirring it over a bowl of ice. The fat in this portion will begin to solidify, causing the ganache to thicken. When both halves have reached the desired temperatures, slowly stream the hot ganache into the cold and stir to combine. You can use a food processor for this step by placing the cool ganache into the bowl of the food processor, turning on the machine, and streaming in the warm ganache. The mixture will not fall below 90°F during this procedure, so there is no risk of creating a grainy texture. Combining the two portions of ganache in this way averages the temperature into the optimal working range, and the fat droplets will be suspended evenly in the water.CHOCOLATE CHOICESThe most common chocolate used for ganache is dark chocolate. Dark refers to the color and includes sweet, semisweet, bittersweet, and unsweetened chocolates. Chocolate is made from cocoa beans that have been roasted and pulverized. The result is chocolate liquor, also known as cocoa mass. As the beans are ground, they exude cocoa butter. Different amounts of cocoa butter are added back into the mixture, depending on which type of chocolate is being made. Dark chocolate contains less cocoa butter than milk chocolate. White chocolate is comprised of nearly all cocoa butter and no chocolate liquor. (Due to the lack of chocolate liquor, white chocolate is not technically chocolate. However, it can be used in the same manner as types containing chocolate liquor, with certain modifications.) Chocolates also differ in the amount of sugar they contain. Bittersweet has less sugar than semisweet. Unsweetened chocolate has no added sugar, and I often used it in conjunction with bittersweet for an extra dark, intense flavor. Milk solids, which contain milk fat, are used to make milk and white chocolate. The added fat and the increased cocoa butter content make the lighter chocolates softer and more susceptible to damage from heat. You can certainly make ganache from milk or white chocolate, using the traditional technique, but you"ll have to adjust the proportion of cream downward to compensate for the increased fat content.All the recipes in this chapter begin with the same ingredients and techniques. The Master Ganache is made with an equal ratio of chocolate to cream. This is considered a ganache of medium consistency. Recipes categorized as firm are made with more than 50 percent chocolate. Soft ganaches have more than 50 percent cream. The recipes are not mysterious, nor are they difficult. If, however, you want to impress your sister, keep this information to yourself.Ganache Family Treemedium1 part chocolate : 1 part cream Truffles Fudge Fondue Milk Chocolate Ganache White Chocolate Ganache Caramel Ganache Frozen Chocolate Parfait Chocolate Soufflé Ganache Glaze Chocolate Sabayonfirm2 parts chocolate : 1 part cream Raspberry Ganache Banana Ganache John Do Ya Ganache Candy Bars Baked Whiskey Tortes Chocolate Frostingsoft1 part chocolate : 2 or more parts cream Chocolate Whipped Cream Campton Place Hot Chocolate Chocolate Sauce Chocolate Mousse Trio Deep, Dark Chocolate TartMEDIUM-TEXTURED GANACHE is the MASTER GANACHE, and all the recipes that are derived from it begin with a 1 : 1 ratio of chocolate to cream. (Adjustments have been made to the Milk and White Chocolate Ganache recipes to achieve a medium texture.)FIRM-TEXTURED GANACHE is made with 2 : 1 ratio of chocolate to cream and is suitable for icings, fillings, and baking.SOFT-TEXTURED GANACHE uses a 1 : 2 ratio of chocolate to cream or even more cream.All the recipes are related to the Master Ganache. They all begin with the same ingredients and techniques. Note that the ratio is based on weight, not volume.MASTER GANACHEmediumMASTER RECIPEyield: 2 cupsCan deep, dark, intense, rich, velvety smooth chocolate be a spiritual experience? It certainly is heavenly when mixed with cream. Praise the pastry angels and pass the bonbons! This is the basic ganache recipe. Use it for truffles, tarts, fillings . . . you name it. Follow the same technique when adjusting the recipe for firm and soft ganache. An alternative food processor method is given, which can be applied to any ganache recipe in this chapter. I want to introduce you to ganache and persuade you to make it a staple in your refrigerator. As long as you don"t eat it all as a midnight snack, it can be available to help you throw together dessert at a moment"s notice.SPECIAL TOOLS:Food processor (optional)Candy thermometer8 ounces bittersweet chocolate1 cup heavy cream1. Using a serrated knife, finely chop the chocolate into 1/4-inch pieces. Don"t be lazy here. Big chunks will not melt.TRADITIONAL METHOD2. Place the chocolate in a medium heatproof bowl. Bring the cream to a boil in a small saucepan over medium heat. Boiling means the cream will actually rise up in the pan and threaten to boil over.3. Immediately pour the boiling cream over the chopped chocolate. Tap the bowl on the counter to settle the chocolate into the cream, then let it sit for 1 minute. Using a rubber spatula, slowly stir in a circular motion, starting from the center of the bowl and working out to the sides. Be careful not to add too much air to the ganache. Stir until all the chocolate is melted, about 2 minutes. It may look done after 1 minute of stirring, but keep going to be sure it"s emulsified.FOOD PROCESSOR METHOD2. Place the chopped chocolate in a food processor fitted with the steel blade. Bring the cream to a boil in a small saucepan over medium heat (or bring to a boil in the microwave).3. Immediately pour the hot cream into the food processor, on top of the chocolate. Let sit for 1 minute, then pulse the machine three times. Scrape down the sides with a rubber spatula and pulse three more times, until all the chocolate is melted. This smooth, silky chocolate is now ganache. Transfer the ganache to a bowl.4. Let the ganache sit at room temperature until it cools to 70°F. In a 65°F room, this will take only 15 minutes. You can speed up the process by pouring the ganache out onto a clean baking sheet (thinner layers cool faster). Once the ganache reaches 70°F, it is ready to be used. At this point it can also be covered and stored in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.NOTE I prefer using a serrated knife for chopping chocolate. It"s safer because the blade doesn"t slip off the hard surface of the chocolate. And I find that it"s easier to get small chunks.Variations* Tangy Ganache: Replace all or part of the cream with crème fraîche.* Earl Grey Ganache: Place 1 bag of Earl Grey tea in the cream and bring it to a boil. Cover and let it steep for 10 minutes. Remove the tea bag and squeeze over the cream. Rewarm the tea-infused cream and continue with the recipe.* Lavender Ganache: Place 1 to 2 tablespoons lavender flowers in the cream and bring it to a boil. Remove from the heat, cover, and let it steep for 10 minutes. Strain and rewarm the lavender-infused cream, then continue with the recipe.* Orange Ganache: Add 1 tablespoon finely grated orange zest to the cream and bring to a boil; strain into the chocolate. When the ganache is complete, add 1 tablespoon Grand Marnier.TRUFFLESmediumyield: About 2 dozen 1-inch trufflesThe original chocolate truffle was a French confection meant to simulate the much-sought-after truffle fungus. It was rolled rough like the real fungus, not round, and covered in cocoa powder to replicate the dirt it grows in. (Whose idea was it to make people think they were eating dirt?) Chocolate truffles are a rich, decadent treat with a special elegance all their own. Don"t be intimidated! Truffles are easy to make and always appreciated. The choice of alcohol to use is yours. It can be a liqueur, such as Chambord or Grand Marnier, or another spirit like bourbon or rum. The alcohol can also be left out entirely. Substitutions for it could include brewed coffee, orange juice, or fruit puree.SPECIAL TOOLS:Candy thermometerPiping bag with a large (#6) plain tip (optional)Parchment paper1 recipe Master Ganache (page 16), with the addition of:2 tablespoons (1/4 stick) unsalted butter, softened1 tablespoon light corn syrup2 tablespoons liquor, such as Grand Marnier, kirsch, bourbon, or rumFOR THE COATING2 cups sifted unsweetened cocoa powder8 ounces bittersweet chocolate1. Follow the method for Master Ganache, adding the butter to the chocolate and the corn syrup to the cream before bringing the cream to a boil.2. Pour the hot cream and corn syrup over the chopped chocolate and butter. Tap the bowl on the counter to settle the chocolate into the cream, then let it sit for 1 minute. Using a rubber spatula, stir slowly in a circular motion, starting from the center of the bowl and working out to the sides. Be careful not to add too much air to the ganache. Stir until the chocolate is completely melted, about 2 minutes.3. Add the liquor and stir to combine. Allow the ganache to cool at room temperature until it is firm. This should take at least 4 hours in a 65°F room or 2 hours in the refrigerator.4. Once the ganache is firm, it can be formed into truffle balls. Using a piping bag, a mini ice cream scoop, or a tablespoon, make 1-inch-diameter blobs. Then roll the blobs into somewhat uniform balls by hand. This is messy, no doubt about it. If they begin to warm up and become soft, refrigerate for 10 to 15 minutes. If you have hot hands or it is a hot day, it may feel as though you can"t get a grip on the truffle. Work near a sink with cold running water. When the ganache feels like it"s melting, cool your hands under the running water, then dry them and dust with a little of the cocoa powder. Be careful not to get too much cocoa powder on the truffles, or they will taste like cocoa powder.COATINGAfter the truffles are rolled, they can be finished in a variety of ways. The original cocoa powder coating is the easiest, and quite good.1. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.2. Using a serrated knife, finely chop the chocolate into 1/4 inch pieces and place it in a medium heatproof bowl. Fill a medium saucepan half full of water, bring it to a simmer, then turn off the heat. Create a double boiler by placing the bowl on top of the saucepan. Stir the chocolate occasionally with a rubber spatula until it melts, about 2minutes.3. When the chocolate has melted, take it off the heat. Stir it slowly with a rubber spatula until the temperature drops to 90°F, about 5 minutes. Place the remaining cocoa powder in a small bowl.4. Drop one rolled ganache ball into the melted chocolate. Remove it with a fork, tap off the excess chocolate, and toss it into the cocoa powder. Roll the truffle around in the cocoa until it is well coated. Transfer the truffle to the prepared baking sheet and let it harden. Repeat with each truffle, coating one at a time.Truffles should be stored in an airtight container at 60° to 65°F. Refrigerating them is OK too. If condensation forms when they come out of the refrigerator, simply toss them in more cocoa powder before serving.Variations* Other delightful coatings include finely chopped toasted nuts (see page 366), toasted unsweetened coconut, grated milk chocolate, and powdered sugar. Match the coating of the truffles to the liquor used in the ganache, such as Frangelico truffles with hazelnut crunch coating. This will create an interesting depth of flavor.* Steep 1 black currant tea bag in the cream and add 2 tablespoons Chambord as the liquor.* Add 1 tablespoon instant espresso powder to the cream and use 2 tablespoons Kahlúa as the liquor.* Add 1 tablespoon finely chopped orange zest and 1/2 teaspoon orange oil to the cream. Let sit for 10 minutes. Strain out the zest. Use 2 tablespoons Grand Marnier as the liquor.* Add 2 tablespoons strained blackberry puree (or the puree of another fruit) instead of the liquor.* Peel and grate fresh ginger and squeeze from it 2 tablespoons ginger juice. Add this and 1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon juice instead of the liquor.* Combine 1/2 cup raisins and 1/2 cup Champagne or brandy in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat, then turn off the heat and let the raisins cool and absorb the liquor. Drain off any remaining liquid, chop the raisins, and stir the raisins into the warm ganache.FUDGE FONDUEmediumyield: 1 2/3 cups, serving 6Fondue is back! This will be good news to those of you who didn"t get your fill in the 1970s. Traditional fondue is melted cheese into which you dip hunks of bread. My chocolatey version is perfect for dipping pieces of fruit, cubes of cake, or cookies. Though it"s really no more than a glorified chocolate sauce, fondue is a great excuse to cover everything in chocolate. This dish always appears on my Valentine"s Day menu. It"s a great way to get a romantic conversation going. If you don"t have an old fondue set in the garage, any dish will do. No skewers? Go ahead and use your fingers.SPECIAL TOOLS:Candy thermometerFondue pot or serving dishSkewers8 ounces bittersweet chocolate1/2 cup sweetened condensed milk1/2 cup whole milk1/2 teaspoon finely chopped orange zestNOTE Some of my favorite fruits to dip include:Crisp fresh apple wedgesDehydrated apple chipsJuicy pear wedgesBananasFresh cherriesDried cherries: Combine 1/4 cup dried cherries, 1/4 cup port, and 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil, then turn off the heat. Cool and let the cherries absorb the liquor. Spear them with skewers.Raisins: Combine 1/4 cup raisins with 1/4 cup verjuice or white wine and 1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice in a small saucepan and bring to a boil. Turn off the heat and let the raisins cool. Spear them with skewers.1. Using a serrated knife, finely chop the chocolate into 1/4-inch pieces and place it in a medium heatproof bowl.2. Bring the milks to a boil in a small saucepan over medium heat. Pour over the chopped chocolate. Tap the bowl on the counter to settle the chocolate into the cream, then let it sit for 1 minute. Using a rubber spatula, slowly stir in a circular motion, starting from the center of the bowl and working out to the sides. Stir until all the chocolate is melted, about 2 minutes.3. When the chocolate has melted, insert a thermometer. When the temperature reaches 98°F, add the orange zest and stir to incorporate. Serve the fondue immediately or let it cool, cover it with plastic wrap, and store it at room temperature overnight. To reheat, place a bowl of fondue over a saucepan half full of simmering water, creating a double boiler, and stir continuously until melted, about 5 minutes. Do not let the temperature exceed 100°F when reheating, or the ganache can break. The fondue will also keep for up to 2 weeks in the refrigerator.Variations* Infuse the milk with your favorite spice, then strain. My favorite combination is a star anise pod, a 2-inch cinnamon stick, and 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon.* Spike the milk with 2 tablespoons rum, Grand Marnier, or Poire William.Copyright © 2003 by Sherry Yard. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company.
The Secrets of Baking: Simple Techniques for Sophisticated Desserts FROM THE PUBLISHER
Even the Most Elaborate Pastry creation can be broken down into a combination of simple recipes that anyone can master. In The Secrets of Baking, Sherry Yard, named the nation's top pastry chef by the James Beard Society, shows how varying one fundamental recipe puts dozens of possibilities at your fingertips, from homey favorites to French patisserie classics to inspired, fanciful showstoppers. Beginning with ganache, which is just chocolate and cream, you'll learn how to add ingredients or tweak a technique to turn out related desserts such as truffles, fondue, mousse, hazelnut-chocolate candies, a rich chocolate tart, and even a stunning frozen chocolate "tower" worthy of an acclaimed pastry chef. You'll learn the secrets of a foolproof cream puff dough that holds the keys to countless other desserts, from chocolate eclairs to cannoli to beignets. With Yard's friendly help, you'll graduate from making brioche, the "king of breads," to coffeecake, sticky buns, doughnuts, and panettone. You'll even be able to create your own signature desserts like the ones that made Yard famous, simply by mixing and matching the master recipes. In fascinating, personable introductions to each chapter, Yard tells you what you need to know about how ingredients work together. Not only will you understand the inner workings of each recipe, you'll come to see relationships throughout the entire world of desserts. And whether you dip into The Secrets of Baking to make Yard's best-ever recipes or use the book to take a short course in pastry making, you're sure to become a more confident and skilled baker with Yard at your side.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
With an air of authority and an enthusiastic tone, Yard sets out to prove that pastry making need not be a complicated affair. Yard, the executive pastry chef at Spago Beverly Hills, has an easy didactic style that comes across in her spunky text and straightforward recipes. She divides her book into 12 master recipe chapters (such as Ganache, Vanilla Sauce and Brioche) instead of sticking to the conventional sections on cookies, cakes and tarts. This refreshing approach brings to light the relationships between certain recipes-how, for example, the chocolate and cream in the Master Ganache can be transformed into Campton Place Hot Chocolate, with minor adjustments in ingredient quantities and cooking methods. Yard also is generous with variations, offering a handful of optional approaches to most recipes. Her desire is to teach the reader the fundamentals, and then apply them to more complicated (but often very doable) dishes. Headnotes are peppered with encouragements like "Remember, whisking by hand burns calories." Sometimes, the text can become cumbersome with scientific explanations, such as the pH scale discussion in the Curds chapter. But as Yard explains in her introduction, "I show you how the ingredients interact with one another, so you'll know the reasons behind the steps you're following." A wide range of recipes makes the book accessible to all levels, allowing novices to become comfortable with pastry basics and professionals to combine multiple recipes to create more complicated impressive confections. (Nov. 4) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
Pastry chef at Wolfgang Puck's Spago, Yard has written an immensely appealing guide to the fundamentals of creating great desserts. Instead of grouping her recipes into the standard categories of cakes, pies and tarts, and so forth, she has arranged them according to families, based on the essential building blocks of the pastry kitchen. For example, her delicious Frozen Chocolate Parfaits, Baked Whiskey Tortes, and Dark Chocolate Tart are all built on the chocolate-and-cream mixture called ganache, while caramel is the basis for a range of treats from brittle and pralines to gelato and granita. Each chapter opens with an accessible discussion of the chemistry involved, and "family trees" illustrate the connections among the diverse recipes that follow. A final chapter offers "Master Combinations," delicious desserts intended to inspire readers to come up with their own combinations; also included are a glossary of baking terms and an excellent section on equipment and ingredients. Featuring detailed and clearly written recipes (many of which include multiple variations), Yard's book is approachable enough for the novice and even challenging for the experienced baker. Highly recommended. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.