Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

The Making, Baking and Selling of Gourmet Cookies


People order gourmet cookies for a number of reasons; adolescence memories, a way to unwind, a reward or simply because they have a sweet craving. Regardless of the intention, cookies have been and always will be the go to cure when desiring consolation food.

When making, baking and selling gourmet cookies a company should have a properly thought out procedure so each customer has a unforgettable encounter each and every time they walk through the entrance. It starts with the ingredients. Use only pure ingredients with no preservatives. The sequence of each ingredient being blended is very crucial to the outcome of both the look and taste of each of flavor.

Once the dough is created it is scooped into dough balls. They are immediately utilized and placed on a sheet pan and pressed down a little bit to help them spread out during baking. Once this is finished, additional goodies are placed on top to make the gourmet cookies look even more delicious. Now they are all set to be baked. Depending on the number of trays cooking and the flavor, this determines the baking time. The aim is for the cookies to bake to a golden brown. Once they are finished baking, each tray is then put on a cooling rack. They need 10-15 minutes to cool before they can be placed on display for selling or packaging.

The gourmet cookies going on display should be setup in a beautiful and scrumptious manner inside a bakery case. After all, they are the first thing customers see as they walk into the store. When featuring several gourmet flavors it can be a little too much the first time a customer steps into your store, so customer service is incredibly important. This is why your representatives should be trained to always be ready, willing and able to assist with any questions. What is most gratifying is when a customer bites into one of your tasty gourmet cookies and a big smile comes over her face. That should make all the tough work well worth it!

As you can see there is definitely a strategy to making, baking and selling gourmet cookies. Sometimes the process gets monotonous, but it is very satisfying to see all your difficult work make people happy, even if it is for just a temporary moment in time.




Schmerty's Cookies features 20 unique flavors of gourmet cookies. These are the perfect gift for any occasion. Local delivery and nationwide shipping is available. To view more articles visit The Schmerty's Blog.




Thursday, August 2, 2012

Gourmet Granola - Baking Secrets


Where do I begin writing about the secrets of baking gourmet granola?

This is a struggle for me. I want to share the wealth per se (of knowledge) about what makes a truly wholesome and healthy granola but at the same there's that lurking thought of not wanting to give away all the secrets gleaned from many in kitchen experiences and years of living. Oh what the heck, let's go for it.

So what does make a truly great granola? For sure, it's the flavour. And how does one get a full-bodied gourmet flavour from granola? Of primary importance in the process is how it is baked. You will want to bake your granola in a medium to slow oven. For purposes of clarification, a medium oven is 350 degrees F while a slow oven would be 250 to 300 degrees. Personally I bake at 350, however this takes constant vigilance so the granola does not burn. 30 minutes of total bake time with stirring at 10 minute intervals will ensure even browning. If using a slower oven, then the stirring intervals may be stretched out along with the total bake time as well.

The second secret in developing the flavour of your finished gourmet granola is the caramelization of the sugars present in the mix. That's why you must be careful to not let it overbrown or overbake. This will result in a burnt sugar taste to your end product, definitely not what you are seeking.

A third and equally important secret in making gourmet granola is premium quality ingredients. This will include recently milled grains, nuts and seeds of ultimate freshness, fresh crop honey (not overly processed) and good quality vegetable oil. Unless your living in the boonies, all of these ingredients should be readily available from a local farmer's market or bulk food or dry grocer's store.

To recap, that's baking time, taking care to ensure even browning and using the freshest ingredients. Put all three of these secrets together and you too will excel in your granola baking venture.




Rod Sider is an accomplished although retired chef. One of his food passions is gourmet granola, which he has been creating for nearly 40 years. Check out his blog at [http://www.gourmetgranola.org/] for the latest info on everything granola and for the latest insider secret.




Sunday, February 26, 2012

Dorie Greenspan on Desserts, Baking, and Restaurants in Paris

Phenomenal baker, cookbook author and bon vivant, Dorie Greenspan, shares her favorite dessert recipes, cooking tools and Paris restaurants with Facebook fans.

Hi Dorie, what’s your favorite cheesecake to make and/or eat?
I’m a fan of the old-fashioned tall New York-style cheesecake—the one that’s baked.

Do you have a favorite recipe for Galette des Rois?
The recipe that I’ve been using for years is the one in Paris Sweets. It’s very classic: two rounds of good puff pastry filled with almond cream—the same cream I use as the base for baked fruit tarts, except I give it an extra shot of rum.

Are there any "must have" baking tools?
No baker should be without: oven thermometer, accurate measuring cups and spoons, a kitchen scale, a great rolling pin and heavy-duty baking sheets.

What suggestions do you have for pairing the wines with specific chocolates and cake flavors?
I find that chocolate is not so easy to pair with wine. I’ve had luck pairing it with Mas Amiel, Banyuls and fruity, Syrah-based wines. When I made the chocolate-cayenne cookies for Food & Wine, they paired them with Lambrusco and I thought that was genius.

Hi Dorie, a friend asked me to make cookies using beer. Any advice?
I’ve never made cookies with beer. Hmmm. I don’t know if this is doable, but I’m wondering if you shouldn’t boil the beer down to a syrup to concentrate its flavor and then use the syrup in your cookies. I’d love to know what you come up with.

What are some of your favorite cookies that won’t go stale quickly?
When it comes to cookies that are good keepers, I think you can go two almost opposite ways: go for biscotti or other ’dry’ cookies, cookies that you can ’refresh’ by popping them in the oven for a few minutes, if necessary; or you can go for buttery cookies like shortbreads, always good keepers.

What is the most attractive dessert you regularly make and how do you go about the decorating process?
I make very simple desserts and it’s rare that I decorate them. This past weekend, I made an open-faced free-form apple tart, a galette, and the beautifully browned apples were all the decoration the tart had. Similarly, I’ll make cookies and depend on their shape for decoration (or a dusting of sparkle sugar) or make a cake in a great shape and let the graphic form be the decoration.

What’s the one thing in your kitchen you could not live without—be it a utensil, ingredient, appliance, or otherwise?
I’ve got a kitchen—okay three kitchens—filled with lots and lots of gear, but the tools I come back to over and over again are very basic: my measuring equipment, my baking pans, my Dutch ovens, and, of course, my stand mixer. I’d never want to be without my mixer.

My meringues are a bit marshmallow-like in the center, how do I get them to have a consistent texture throughout?
I know your problem and feel your pain. I think you should bake them at a very low temperature for a long period—you’re really drying them out, not baking them—and then prop the oven door open for the last 1/2 hour to let out any steam in the oven.

What are the most important skills for a baker?
I think it’s important to understand blending—when butter, sugar and eggs are properly mixed—to be able to make and roll out a dough, to know how things should bake. The best part about learning the skills for baking or cooking is that they’re obtained by practice and practice in this arena is very delicious.

Hi Dorie, what inexpensive hidden food gems have you found in Paris?
I find the supermarkets in Paris jam-packed with little gems and my favorite place to shop for food to take home for myself or to give as gifts is G. Detou-great salts and peppers, caramel chips made with salted butter and terrific sardines.

What is your favorite pâtisserie in Paris?
It’s not possible to name just one—impossible! But my favorite is Pierre Herme. I also really, really like the new Gontran Cherrier, particularly for simple cakes and breads, Hugo and Victor—their pastries have a fabulous look, as does their shop—and Pâtisserie des Rêves.

Hi Dorie! I am working my way through your baking book. I have loved everything so far, especially the French Lemon Creme Tart and World Peace Cookies. Are you working on any new books?
I am thrilled that you’re working—I prefer to think that your playing—your way through Baking From My Home to Yours. I, too, love the Lemon Cream (I’ve got a bowl of it awaiting tarthood in my fridge now) and the World Peace Cookies. I am working on a new book about baking in France. It’ll be out in Fall 2013!

I just received your book Around my French Table. I love it! What are some of your favorite recipes?
Yay—I’m so glad you’re liking the book! Now, with winter here, some of my favorites are Pumpkin Stuffed with Everything Good, Hachis Parmentier, My Go-to-Beef Daube, Marie-Helene’s Apple Cake and the Endives, Apple and Grape dish. I hope you find your own favorites.

How do you stay so healthy and trim with all of your scrumptious recipes?
So funny—I practice what I call Bake (or Cook) and Release: I bake, taste and give away a lot of what I make. Since I can be baking four or five things a day, it’s impossible for me to keep everything. And besides, giving things away makes my neighbors so happy :)

If you were to dive into another culinary culture, what would it be?
What an interesting question. I haven’t considered this before, but I think were I to dive, as you say, I’d dive into the foods of Southeast Asia. Maybe. Hmmm. A good question to dream on.

I grew-up in your neck of the woods in Connecticut and would love to know if there are any can’t-miss places you frequent while home. Cheese at Fromage? Meat from Cliff’s? I’m still in search of a great bakery too— any recent finds?
I love Fromage and yes, I buy meat from Cliff’s as well as from Bennie’s Market. I’m terrible to ask about bakeries, since I bake everything at home, except the great baguettes that I buy at Pip’s, the really good restaurant at the Copper Beech Inn. I love River Tavern, Alforno and Brasserie Pip’s, Bishop’s Orchards and the fabulous Star Fish Market in Guilford. And Ashlawn Farm coffee and the Farmer’s Markets at Ashlawn and Chester. This is making me a little homesick.

Apricot-Tarragon Cocktail Cookies

Apricot-Tarragon Cocktail Cookies. © Quentin Bacon


View the original article here