Tesda Dessert Module
Tesda Dessert Module
Tesda Dessert Module
Pastry Chef
A pastry chef, also known as a pattisier, is a chef that is dedicated to
creating desserts and baked goods. They are in charge of the baking facet of the
kitchen and restaurants. They work with a team of bakers to prepare, cook, and
decorate food. They must be organized and motivated to do the daily work.
The pastry chef may work alone or with a group of cooks and bakers to
prepare, cook, and present food to the customers. They must be motivated and
organized to be able to prepare the finest desserts.
They not only prepare the desserts but also work with the head chef to pair
breads and desserts, order supplies, and hire staff. The pastry chef also creates recipes
to offer a variety of dishes to the customers. They do all of this together with maintaining
records, ordering food, and enforcing food safety standards.
Session Objectives
At the end of the session, you will be able to:
Introduction
A Patisserie/Pastry chef must be knowledgeable and skilled when it comes to
making desserts and pastries. He/she must be able to work well in an environment that
requires one to produce products of quality. In this lesson, you will learn the duties and
responsibilities of a Patisserie/Pastry chef.
Session Objectives
At the end of the session, you will be able to:
Introduction
When it comes to handling food, you not only need top quality ingredients and
equipment but also practice and maintain proper safety and hygienic practices. It
contributes to the efficiency of work flow in the kitchen and also assures the workers
that what they will prepare will be appreciated by the diners/customers.
Apron
A kitchen apron keeps your uniform or clothes clean while cooking. It acts as an
extra barrier between your skin from different materials and ingredients used in
cooking that might cause you injuries. Moreover, make sure that if you will be using
mixers to tie the apron strings properly that it would not get caught up in the mixer
head or any rotating materials.
Gloves
You can protect your hands by using gloves, specifically cut-resistant gloves that
are made with various materials. Though you might still need to exercise caution
when cooking, it is important to wear gloves to avoid contaminating the raw
ingredients when preparing food.
Hair
net
A hair net will keep away the stray hair strands that you have to prevent
contaminating the food with hair.
Mask
It prevents any saliva or contaminants from the cook to mix with the prepared food
that may lead to spoilage.
Closed
shoes
Always wear closed shoes when cooking to protect your feet from any spillage that
may occur when cooking. It acts as a barrier between your feet from the different
materials used in cooking.
Previo
Introdu
us Lesson:
Hand washing is the single most important procedure for preventing the
spread of biological contamination. Here are some hand washing tips and
procedures for your use.
Always consider the faucet, sink and its surrounding contaminated when starting
the hand washing procedure.
urn water on and then wet your hands, wrists, and arms.
Pour enough liquid soap on your palm then work into lather.
Vigorously rub together all surfaces of the lathered hands and arms for 15
seconds. Friction helps remove dirt and microorganisms. Wash around and under
rings, around cuticles, and under fingernails
Rinse hands thoroughly under a stream of water. Running water carries away dirt
and debris. Point fingers down so water and contamination won't drip toward elbows.
ction
Make sure that your nails are short, clean, and without nail polish.
Dont brush or comb your hair when you are near food.
Keep your fingers from your face, mouth, hair, and skin and other parts of the
body.
Never cook while wearing dangling jewelry.Dangling jewelry might get caught
with the kitchen utensils used during service.
Keep potholders nearby and use them. Make sure to have potholders near
you when cooking so you can easily grab it when needed but not to close that it might
catch fire.
Turn pot handles away from the front of the stove. It lowers the chances of
you bumping and knocking down the pots.
Dont let temperature-sensitive foods sit out in the kitchen. Raw meat, fish,
and certain dairy products can spoil quickly, so refrigerate or freeze them right away.
Wipe up spills immediately. Keep the floor dry to avoid slips and falls.
Separate raw meat and poultry from other items whenever you use or store
them. This avoids cross-contamination of harmful bacteria from one food to another.
Next Lesson:
Han
Session Objectives
dwashing Technique
Introduction
In this lesson, you will learn how to properly set up your work station depending
on the menu. You will learn proper procedures in handling the ingredients used in
preparing desserts to ensure efficiency in work and having top quality ingredients.
Ingredients
It is used in the production of dessert to:
Act as a creaming agent with fats and as foaming agent with eggs
To preserve
Ingredients - Sugar
Classification of Refined Sugar
Caster Sugar
o
It supports the quantities of fat and dissolves relatively quickly into doughs
and batters.
It is the premier sugar to use in producing quality desserts and pastries.
o
sugar.
o
irregular texture and syrupy spots. Coarse sugars are less refined and result in
clearer syrup.
Brown Sugar
o
Icing Sugar
o
Invert Sugar
o
Molasses
o
Darker grades are stronger in flavour and contain less sugar than lighter
grades. Molasses retains moisture in baked goods, prolonging their freshness
Corn Syrup
o
Corn syrup aids in retaining moisture and is used in some icings, sweets,
and sugar boiling. It keeps other sugars from recrystallising.
Glucose Syrup
o
Honey
o
It was the first sugar to be used by man. It is the nectar collected from
bees and deposited in their honeycomb. Nectar contains about 80% water and
20% sugar together with essential oils and aromatic compounds that are
responsible for the bouquet of honey, the flavour varying from the flowers from
which the nectar was gathered.
The darker the colour of the honey the stronger its flavour; it is a natural
sugar syrup consisting largely of glucose, fructose and other compounds that give
it is flavours. Flavour is the main reason for using honey.
Honey contains invert sugar which helps retain moisture in baked goods
and gives a soft chewy texture to cakes and cookies, and is baked at a lower
temperature so the invert sugars can caramelise.
Ingredients - Egg
Thicken
Bind
When wet the food items stick together. When cooked, the egg sets and keeps the
food together
Glaze
Aerate
When whipped the egg traps millions of tiny air cells within itself Air bubbles help to
raise other ingredients
Emulsif
y
Clarify
Enrich
Milk
o
It is often used in cakes to thin the cake batter and create steam during
the baking process, acting as a raising agent.
Buttermilk
Cream
o
Clotted cream
o
It is at 48% fat.
Thickened cream
o
It is 35% fat content. This cream may be whipped to trap air because it
contains a gelling agent, vegetable gum , gelatine has also been used but has
been replaced to appeal to a broader market.
Chilled thickened cream whips until it stands in peaks; there are soft
peaks to fold into mousses, bavarois, and firm peaks for piping rosettes of cream
on to a gateau.
The over whipping of cream will result in the product splitting (separation
of the fat and water). Cream with a high fat content is more susceptible to this
occurring.
It ranges from 25% - 18% fat and it will not whip because there is
insufficient fat to trap air bubbles and thicken it.
Yoghurt
o
It has a butter fat content of approx. 35% fat. The higher fat content makes
it ideal for cooking; it may be used in some sauces without the risk of separating.
It is composed mostly of fat, some water, protein, simple sugars and either
salt or culture.
Its main use in baking is to trap air with sugar during the creaming process
this gives lightness as an example cake making.
baked goods adhering to their tins during the baking process. Butter is best
clarified for this purpose.
Ingredients - Oils
It is often used in baked goods as a healthy alternative to butter. This results in a moister
product which lengthens their shelf life.
Many delicately flavored oils like almond oil may also be used for lubrication purposes.
One of the benefits of this is it leaves the baked goods/dessert with sheen.
Cooking sprays are very convenient to use because it is easier to spray a fancy cake
form than to brush with clarified butter. However, these products are expensive and
extremely flammable.
Storage
Both oils and sprays should be kept in very dry cool conditions away from uv light and
warmth which will facilitate rancidity especially in oils.
Spray oils should not be used on non-stick surfaces and the chemical propellant has a
detrimental effect on the surface coating.
Ingredients - Cheese
Cheese Commonly Used in Making Desserts
Bakers Cheese
o
Cottage Cheese
o
It is a lumpy, soft white cheese that can be purchased with small or large
curds. It is often made with skimmed pasteurized cows milk. It can be used as a
low fat alternative to cream cheese as well as for pancake and crepe fillings. It is
also known as curd cheese.
Ricotta Cheese
o
It is from Italy. The word means re-cooked and its origins are in Rome and
connected to the making of Romano and Mozzarella.
Ricotta was first made from the whey that was left after the curds from
these cheeses had been strained. Until about a century ago, this whey was
discarded.
It is now produced commercially made with whole milk rather than whey
Cream Cheese
Known as Chvre in French, goats milk cheese can range in texture from
very dry and crumbly to moist and creamy. There are also fresh and ripened
varieties.
Mascarpone
o
This product is traditionally a triple cream Italian cheese made from cows
milk. It originates from Tuscany and Lombardy, these days is made in Australia
and readily available in Italian specialty shops and large supermarket chains.
This is a very rich cheese made from fresh cream derived from cows milk.
The cream is reduced to near triple crme consistency to give the cheese
its soft, smooth, rich texture, with an extremely rich fat content of 25- 60%,
depending on the manufacturer.
Today, it is best known for its use in tiramisu, gelatine, for filling crepes,
served with fresh figs, and makes beautifully rich cheesecakes. Mascarpone has
the potential to separate very easily due to its very high fat content. For this
reason, minimum mechanical agitation should be applied when working with
mascarpone.
Ingredients - Nuts
Nuts are a good source of protein, fibre, vitamins and minerals. While nuts are
high in fat, the fatty acids in nuts (except coconuts) are mostly polyunsaturated. This
type of fat is considered desirable in our diets. Nuts vary in composition, but most
nuts contain more fat than anything else.
Nuts are most versatile in cooking. Varieties most commonly used in hot and cold
desserts include almonds, chestnuts, coconuts, hazelnuts, macadamias, peanuts,
pecans, pistachios and walnuts.
They can be purchased in many forms including: fresh, in its kernel, salted or
unsalted, loose or pre-packaged, whole, blanched, roasted, chopped, crushed,
slivered, ground/meal, kibbled, paste or oil.
Types of Nuts
Almonds available natural (skin on) and blanched (skin off) in many forms:
whole, split, silvered, chopped and ground / meal.
Chestnuts must be cooked. They are available whole, frozen, glace and
puree.
Hazelnuts available natural (skin on) and blanched (skin off) in many forms:
whole, split, chopped and ground / meal.
Peanuts available whole and crushed. They can be sold roasted and also
salted.
Pistachios available in their skin whole and chopped, as well as blanched and
then silvered. Blanched pistachios are bright green.
Walnuts available whole, as halves, chopped and crushed. Many nuts are also
available as a paste (e.g. almond, hazelnut and pistachio). These pastes are use in
the pastry kitchen for the production of many ice creams, mousses, cream desserts,
petit fours and in cake production. The pastes tend to be quite expensive, however
the flavour is very intense and only small amounts are required to achieve the
desired taste.
Storage
Most shelled nuts benefit greatly from being stored in very clean airtight
containers.These containers are best made from non-porous plastic.
Due to the high fat content in nuts, they are prone to quick spoilage; hence by
storing in the cool room, or for long term storage in the freezer, you will slow down
rancidity.
Most nuts have a shelf life up to 3 months if stored in optimum conditions.
Nuts also deteriorate rapidly when they are subject to kitchen warmth, uv light
and oxygen.
Be aware of insect and weevil infestation in nuts too. This also results in rapid
deterioration of their quality and is more likely to occur in autumn (their breeding
season).
Quality
Sweet taste
Crisp texture
Good color
Uses
Many people have allergies to nuts so it is important to let customers know when
nuts are present in a product. One easy and attractive way to alert customers to the
presence of nuts is to garnish the top of the item with the type of the nut it contains.
Ingredients - Flavorings
Vanilla
Vanilla, sometimes called the orchid of flavour, is the most widely used flavouring agent
in the pastry kitchen.
Its uses are endless because its taste compliments just about every other flavour and
improves many of them.
Vanilla also has the distinction of being more expensive than any other flavouring or
spice, with the exception of saffron.
Authentic vanilla bean is really the dried stamen from an exotic orchid grown in Mexico
and parts of South America. The bean is also known as a pod.
When spilt open, the deliciously fragrant and sweet seeds are exposed and ready to be
scrapped out.
They may be used to infuse and perfume crme Anglaise, crme caramel, brulee, etc.
The pod, once used, may be washed, dried and stored in sugar to again, impart its
delightful heady perfume.
The longer the vanilla is left in the sugar, the stronger the flavour (minimum 1 week).
beans and alcohol. To be labelled as pure, it must contain a specified ratio of vanilla to
alcohol
Vanillin - are fragrant, powdery white crystals that form on the outside of vanilla
bean pods during their curing process. It is used to flavour artificial vanilla extract
Pure vanilla paste is an intensely flavoured thick paste made from vanilla
beans.
Storage of Vanilla Bean
Either way keeps it airtight, in a clean, non porous container and away from heat and UV
light.
For maximum shelf life and also to prevent the pods drying too fast, store in the
refrigerator.
allowed.
Flavoured waters
Aromatic Waters
It is highly fragrant and a few drops are all that is required to impart the aroma.
It is used in many dishes similar to orange blossom water; however rose water is
not as strong in flavour.
It can be used to flavour sugar syrups, honey or poured over desserts and
pastries typically in the Middle East such as baklava and Turkish delight.
Gelatine
Gelatine is a setting agent made from the tendons and bones of calves, cows
and pigs, with most food grade gelatine being extracted from pigskin.
Gelatine is a clear
To use gelatine; the required quantity must first be softened in cold water,
and then added to a hot liquid to dissolve. If gelatine is boiled it may lose its
setting qualities.
Gelatine needs to be chilled to set the liquid; it will not set at room
temperature.
Some fruits such as pineapple and pawpaw contain enzymes that affect the
protein in gelatine and it will not set.
Bloom is not marked on the packet when you purchase. You will need to contact the
manufacturer to get correct setting strength.
Agar Agar
Products set with agar agar will remain firm at room temperature, unlike
those set with gelatine.
Pectin
Pectin is present in all fruits, but fruits vary in the amounts they contain.
Fruits high in pectin include: apples, plums, cranberries, raspberries and
citrus peel.
These fruits can be made into jams and jellies without any added pectin.
Pectin thickens, and in the presence of acid and high amounts of sugar, it
gels. Pectin gels are clear, not cloudy and have an attractive sheen and clean
flavour.
Pectin is commonly used in glazes, jams and jellies, bakery fillings and fruit
confections. It can be purchased as a dry powder, which is typically extracted
and purified from citrus peel or apple skins.
Tapioca
Tapioca is virtually pure starch. It is extracted from the root of the tropical
cassava or manioc plant.
The word tapioca comes from a term used by the Brazilian natives meaning
to press or squeeze out residue, in reference to the way the starch (tapioca)
is extracted. The roots are crushed and stepped in water, and the liquid is
then pressed out.
Pearl tapioca must be soaked before cooking and is often used for tapioca
pudding - a custard like dessert. Tapioca pudding is commonly found on Asian
influenced dessert menus
Ingredients - Fruits
Classification of Fruits
Soft fruits
Stone fruits
Hard fruits
Citrus
Tropical
cantelope, honeydew
Quality of Fruits
Soft fruits
Mould free
Dirt free
Stone fruits
Mould free
Not bruised
Hard fruits
No bruising
Citrus
Mould free
Skin to be firm, not soft
Tropical
No bruising
Miscellaneous
Good colour
Firm to touch
Melons should be heavier than they look.
Purchasing of Fruits
Fruits can be purchased in many forms as listed below with some examples:
Fresh by variety, such as fuji apples, corella pears . Individually, kilo, punnets, tray,
box or case
Dried apple, apricot, banana, blueberry, cherry, citrus peel, cranberry, currant, date, fig,
ginger, kiwifruit, mango, melon, mixed peel, muscatel, pawpaw, peach, pear, pineapple,
plum, prune, raisin, sultana
Canned apple, apricot, cherry, grapefruit, lychee, mandarin, mango, passion fruit,
peach, pear, pineapple
Fruits contain a lot of sugar and have a soft cell structure. If the cell walls and skin of
fruit are damaged they are susceptible to an attack from airborne yeast and moulds, which
results in bruising. To retard yeast and mould attack, it is necessary for us to handle fruits
carefully and cool store them.
Soft fruits and some stone fruits do not like prolonged periods in the fridge, as they are
sensitive to chilling.
Some fruits like banana are susceptible to discolouring when chilled and require storage
at a warmer temperature such as the dry store. o Some fruits such as citrus and hard fruits
can be stored in the dry store; however the shelf life is shortened.
Some fruits such as citrus and hard fruits can be stored in the dry store; however the shelf
life is shortened.
Fruits that need to ripen naturally can also be stored in the dry store in brown paper bags
to increase the ripening process, e.g. stone fruits.
Fruits should be stored away from strong smelling ingredients e.g. basil, parmesan
cheese, garlic.
It is best to eat fruits at room temperature as their flavours are more pronounced.
Tools
Mixing bowl It used for mixing ingredients. It comes in different sizes: small,
medium, and large
Cans, bottles, bottle opener It is used to open food tins, preferably with a
smooth operation, and comfortable grip and turning knob.
Funnels
It is used to fill jars and is made of various sizes of stainless steel, aluminium,
or of plastic.
Graters
It is used to grate, shred, slice, and separate food such as cheese.
Kitchen knives
It is often referred to as the cooks or chefs knife. It is used for peeling and
slicing fruits and vegetables.
o
Spatula
It is used to level off ingredients when measuring and to spread
frostings.
Citrus knife
It is used to section citrus fruits. The blade has a two-sided serrated
edge.
Paring knife
It is used to core, peel, and section fruits and vegetables. The blades
are short and concave with a hollow ground.
Kitchen Shears They are practical for opening food packages, cutting tape
or string to package food, or simply to remove labels or tags from items.
Scraper
It is a rubber or silicone tool to blend or scrape the food from the bowl. It is a
metal, silicone, or plastic egg turner or flipper.
Spoons
It is solid, slotted, or perforated. It is made of stainless steel or plastic, the
solid ones are used to spoon liquids over food and to lift food, including the
liquid out the pot.
Temperature Scales
It is used to measure heat intensity. The different thermometers are used for
different purposes in food preparation for meat, candy, or deep frying.
Vegetable Peeler
It is used to scrape the vegetables and to peel fruits. The best ones are made
of stainless steel with a sharp double blade that swivels.
Wooden spoons
This continues to be kitchen essentials because of their usefulness when used
in creaming, stirring, and mixing. They should be made of hard wood.
Baking Pan
Baking pans like loaf pans, cake pans, pie plates, baking sheets, and so on
are necessary for baking.
Equipment
Refrigerator/Freezer
These are necessary in preventing bacterial infections from food.
Range
It is a kitchen appliance used for cooking food.
Mixers
It is used for mixing, creaming, beating, and whipping ingredients. The
ultimate mixer for anyone who bakes is a stand mixer.
Blenders
These are used to chop, blend, mix, whip, puree, and liquefy all kinds of food.
A blender is a very useful appliance.
Session Objectives
At the end of the session, you will be able to:
Introduction
Desserts are considered as the grand finale of a meal. A dessert that is well presented and tastes
delicious will leave a lasting impression of a great meal with a customer. Traditionally, desserts
were prepared in a separate section of the kitchen by classically trained pastry chefs.
Definition
Dessert is usually the sweet course or dish (as of pastry or ice cream) usually served at the end of
the meal.
Reasons for eating desserts and sweets
Eating dessert is an opportunity to experience different flavours and textures that you
cannot get in other food like vegetables, meats, and fruits.
Dessert can be an opportunity to be creative. You can make interesting mixtures that
you otherwise may not have thought of.
Dessert isnt fattening. Remember that there is no such thing as fattening food.
It will make you feel like a kid again. The fastest way to recapture your youth is to eat
like a kid.
Session Objectives
At the end of the session, you will be able to:
Introduction
To create a well-balanced meal, one should be familiar with the different categories of desserts to
assist in menu planning. Having a dessert from each category will offer a greater choice for the
customer.
Fruit Desserts
Poached fruit
o Fruit used for poaching should be ripe and free of any blemishes. The liquid used
for poaching is mostly sugar syrup which is a combination of water and sugar and
cooked under low fire until the sugar is dissolved in the liquid or the right
consistency is achieved.
o The procedure of poaching depends on the ripeness and the consistency of the
fruit to be poached. The fruit is placed into the nearly boiling sugar syrup and
poached until soft, then left in the syrup to cool.
o This method only applies to very ripe fruits such as stone fruits that dont require
too much cooking
Candied fruit
o Fruit is poached in sugar syrup until soft. It is then placed into a 20Baum hot
sugar solution.
o During this period, water in the fruit exchanges with the sugar solution. After 24
hours drain off the sugar solution and boil 2-3 higher. This is repeated until the
solution is 36Baum. 10% glucose of the sugar weight is recommended, to avoid
crystallisation of the sugar.
o Heat caramelises the sugar, which then changes the flavour and the colour.
o It also leaves a very high gloss on the product. Fruit may also be dipped into
liquid caramel; this method does not give much flavour improvement.
o The fruit is placed into a hotbox or into an oven (100C), it will then dry out and
become crispy. Soft fruit may be formed into certain shapes and then dried
(flowers). Fruits with high acid content are very suitable for drying out into fruit
chips.
Pastry Desserts
Pastries is a term used to describe products that fall into the classification of pastry products.
Pastry is a dough made of flour, water, and fat. There are a number of different types of pastry.
Pastry is made with precision and usually requires exact measurements and particular handling in
order to turn out well.
Types of Pastry
Puff Pastry
o It is made with many layers that expand as it is baked.
o It requires multiple steps to make and normally involves rolling out the pastry,
spreading solid fat, folding the pastry over, and rolling it again. This process is
repeated several times to create small pockets where the fat will melt and leave air
pockets that will puff the pastry.
Choux Pastry
o Making pate a choux or choux pastry can be a bit difficult because the timing of it
is fairly precise.
o It is made by boiling fat and water, and then adding flour. Next, the mixture is
cooled usually in a water bath to fasten cooling. Once the mixture has cooled,
eggs are added gradually, which results in a smooth, shiny dough. The pastry is
then baked, and later filled.
Short Pastry
o This is the most commonly used form of pastry.
Filo/Phyllo Pastry
o To use filo/phyllo pastry, spread each sheet with butter and layer it in four or five
layers before wrapping around a filling
o Filo/Phyllo dries out quickly. This makes it necessary to keep the sheets layered
between parchment paper and covered with a damp towel while it is being worked
with.
o The fat in the layers melts and causes air pockets, which results in a light, flaky
pastry.
A solution of syrup made of sugar and water is boiled to evaporate part of the
water. As the water is boiled off, the temperature of the syrup gradually rises.
When all the water has evaporated, all that is left is melted sugar. This sugar
then begins to caramelize or turn brown and change in flavour. As the heating
continues, the sugar continues to darken and then burn.
One part water (by weight) is enough to dissolve and cook 3 to 4 parts sugar.
There is no point in adding more water than is necessary because you just
have to boil it off.
Simple Syrup
Simple syrup
It is a solution of equal weights of sugar and water,
Dessert syrup
It is a flavoured simple syrup that is used to moisten and flavour some cakes.
Flavourings used may be extracts, such as vanilla or liquors such as rum or
kirsch. Flavourings should be added after the syrup has cooled because
adding it to a hot syrup may make it lose its flavour.
Syrups may also be flavoured by boiling them with lemon or orange rind.
Crystallization
Wash down the sides of the saucepan with a brush dipped in water.
This removes crystals that may seed the whole batch.
When first bringing the syrup to a boil, cover the pan and boil for
several minutes. Condensed steam will wash the sides of the pan.
Uncover and finish cooking without stirring.
Ingredients
1 kg White sugar
1 cup water
Procedure
1. In a sauce pan, pour in the water and the sugar. Stir the mixture until the
sugar is completely dissolved.
2. When the sugar is completely dissolved, place the pan on medium heat until
it boils to form the sugar syrup.
3. Dip a brush in water and brush the insides of the pan to clean and remove
the sugar that has formed by dissolving it with the water from the brush.
4. To determine the stages of doneness, you can use a candy thermometer to
test the temperature.
5. You can also test for doneness by dropping a bit of the mixture into a
container of cold water and checking the hardness of the cooled sugar.
Stage
Temperatur
e
F
Thread 230
Soft
Ball
Firm
Ball
Hard
Ball
240
245
Description
C
110
The sugar syrup forms thin threads when dropped in cold water
115
118
250- 122- When dripped from a spoon the syrup forms thick threads that
260 127 when dropped in cold water can still be removed and molded
into a ball shape. This hard ball will hold its shape and cannot
be flattened.
Soft
Crack
When the syrup is dropped into the cold water, it separates into
265- 130hard threads but they are not brittle. When removed from the
270 132
water, these threads will bend a little before they break.
Hard
Crack
Caram 320- 160- The syrup goes from clear to brown as its temperature rises
el
340 170 due to caramelization.
Basic Techniques
Techniques used to produce quality hot and cold desserts
Beating
Mixing vigorously to incorporate air into an ingredient or mixture
Whisking
Using a whisk to incorporate air into liquids like cream and egg whites into meringues
Folding
Gentle movement that incorporates one product into another.
Fold nuts into cream
Fold sugar into meringue.
Baking
Subjecting unbaked product to heat in an enclosed area such as an oven
Whipping
Same as whisking
Blending
Combining two or more ingredients
Boiling
Subjecting food to heat while being completely submerged in liquid
Poaching
Subjecting food to heat in liquid that is hot, but not moving; food needs to be totally
submerged at a temperature of 90 to 93C
Steaming
Subjecting food to heat in vapour of boiling liquid from below
Enrobing
Completely covering product; pouring ganache over the top, allowing ganache to flow
down the side to completely cover the cake; to dip in chocolate to completely cover all
sides
Churning
Continual mixing of a liquid until an outcome is achieved
Session Objectives
Introduction
Dessert presentation is all about making the dessert look as attractive as possible to the customer.
It is part of the dining experience. In this lesson, you will learn the proper ways in presenting
desserts and how to choose the appropriate garnish to decorate a certain dessert.
Introduction
Proper storage of desserts and its ingredients helps in prolonging its shelf life. Storage
procedures and proper storage conditions vary depending on the contents of the desserts and also
the composition of the different ingredients used in preparing desserts.
Sanitation Practices
You should keep away from serving food or food in general if you are ill to avoid
contamination.
Glass container
Plastic container
Plastic/cellophane
Aluminium foil
Cling wrap
Packaging tapes
Boxes
Desserts that contain uncooked eggs should be handled with extreme care
since dangerous bacteria such as salmonella can increase in raw eggs. You
have to be really careful with food containing eggs such as chocolate mousse
and uncooked cheesecakes.
Food like egg custards contains protein that provides good food for bacteria.
If custards are not heated and cooled properly and quickly, bacteria in the
custard can grow quickly that might be dangerous for food consumption
Pastry cooks pack desserts away for safe storage until required for sale or service period.
All product needs to be packaged so that the integrity of the product is not compromised
during storage.
Ice cream is placed into freezer compatible food safe containers before being wrapped
securely, labelled and stored in the freezer until it is required.
Fresh desserts that have not sold would be stored in container that will allow them to be
covered without destroying any garnish that might be placed on top.
Wrapping or covering is the most dangerous part of keeping everything in place. Any
container that is the wrong size will cause damage to finished product.
Stages of production
Producing desserts skill is time management and planning. Very rarely are all desserts
made the day they are sold. Timelines can be as much as 3 days. Frozen desserts may
have been produced 2-3 weeks before.
us Lesson:
Introduction
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