<ChefTina> What type of menu
are you interested in? Desserts for plating, or whole cakes and
tarts, those types of things?
<tciccarini> Desserts for plating.
<Joan Nathan> For
a dessert for plating, I would make a cranberry nut torte.
<Annie> Can you use any kind of nut?
<Joan Nathan> I
use walnuts, but you could use pecans as well.
<Annie> When making sugar cookies, must
you refrigerate the dough?
<ChefTina> It is very important to refrigerate
sugar dough before baking.
<Annie> Oh, for how long?
<ChefTina> It needs to refrigerate until
it is completely chilled, depending on the refrigerator; an hour
or two is probably enough.
<tciccarini> I am new as a pastry chef,
and I would like some ideas.
<ChefTina> I always begin by thinking
about flavors and other seasonal items, from there you can come
up with great holiday desserts. For winter holidays, think about
chestnuts, cranberries, citrus, quince, pears, and apples, which
are great right now. Also think about spices; this is a great
time of year for using spices and nuts. If you start by thinking
of basic flavors your options are endless.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Is there something
unique about the dough for Soufganiots, or can I use any yeast
doughnut dough?
<Joan Nathan> I
use a dough that can sit in the refrigerator overnight. Any good
yeast dough with lots of eggs and butter will do. The dough uses
yeast, flour, eggs, milk, and butter with lemon zest. I let it
rise and then keep it in the refrigerator overnight. Then I make
the donuts, fry them, and use a tiny spoon to insert the jelly.
You could also use a syringe.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Freshly fried
is always best, but how far in advance can I fry them? Any hints
on keeping them fresh?
<Joan Nathan> I
agree freshly fried is the best, however I sometimes make them
in the morning and keep them out all day. Alternatively, you
can fry them way ahead and freeze them and then put them in the
oven, about 350 degrees.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Thanks. That sounds
like a big time saver.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Joan, do you know
how pastry chefs and bakers can get kosher certified?
<Joan Nathan>Yes,
you can go to a kosher certifier like the Orthodox Union. They
have to carefully scrutinize what you are doing. If you are using
dairy, then no meat products whatsoever can be used. The kitchen
must be koshered, and then they will come to watch what you are
doing until they feel confident. Also you must have a mashkiach
on the premises to watch over what you are doing.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Does no meat include
no eggs?
<Joan Nathan> Eggs
are neutral. They can be used with milk or meat.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> If I wanted to
surprise my friend with a classic Jewish holiday treat, what
would you suggest?
<Joan Nathan> Depends
on the season. There are so many... rugelach, apple cake, hamentashen.
<Angela_PastryScoop> Are rugelach easy
to make? I love them.
<Joan Nathan> Rugelach
are so easy to make. Do you want a recipe?
<Angela_PastryScoop> Of course! They
are always a crowd pleaser. Especially chocolate.
<Joan Nathan>This
is a great recipe:
8 ounces cream cheese, 2 sticks unsalted butter, 2 cups flour,
confectioners' sugar for dusting.
Chocolate filling: 1 cup bittersweet chocolate, shaved, 1/4
cup sugar.
Make the dough in a Kitchen Aid, and refrigerate for about 2
hours. Roll into four balls, which you will roll out into four
circles. Cut dough into 16 pie shaped pieces. Spread the chocolate
filling, and roll up from wide side to the center. Bake in a
350 degree oven for 25 minutes, switching in the middle. Dust
with confectioner's sugar. It makes 64 tiny rugelach. You can
also fill it with nuts and with raspberry or thick apricot jam.
You can also freeze the rugalach.
<Angela_PastryScoop> Thanks Joan. That
is really great.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Fantastic! I'm
going to make some next week.
<Red> Please excuse my ignorance, but
what Jewish holiday best suits this recipe, or is there no specific
one?
<Joan Nathan> Every
holiday, but Passover you can't serve rugelach. You can't at
Passover because you can't use regular flour.
<Red> Thank you.
<Joan Nathan>Another
recipe I really like is chocolate babka. That is really delicious.
<Angela_PastryScoop> The babka would
be a good thing to bring to a party for the host.
<Joan Nathan>Kuchen
Bucehm is a delicious variation of babka that I learned in Baltimore.
<KimH> Hello. What is babka?
<Joan Nathan> Babka
is a yeast cake from Eastern Europe often filled with chocolate.
It is delicious. Usually people make them dry, but my recipe
is moist.
<KimH> Thanks.
<noriza> Joan, do you have a website,
and if you do, are some of these wonderful recipes available
there???
<Joan Nathan> No,
I don't have a website, but Maryland Public Television has a
site with lots of information. Also, google search with my name.
You can also buy my cookbooks!
<noriza> I will do that, Joan!! Thanks!!!
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> What are some
classic Passover desserts?
<Joan Nathan> Passover,
my favorite holiday. Lots of nuts and chocolate tortes. Chocolate
covered matzah is one, almond Lemon Torte, coconut nut torte.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> So instead of
regular flour, you use matzo meal or substitute ground nuts?
<Joan Nathan> Instead
of regular flour you use matzo meal, ground nuts or matzah cake
meal. At my Passover Seder, I always serve chocolate torte, almond
lemon torte and a fried chremslel. These are dumplings also.
I had a delicious tishpishti, an orange-honey cake which is Sephardic,
and I used it in the New York Times at Passover.
<RENATTA> Can you recommend any sugar
free dessert for holiday treat?
<Joan Nathan> Fruit
compotes are great, and you don't have to have any sugar in them.
<Angela_PastryScoop> You know who has
a great sugar free (and kosher) dessert is Eileen's Special Cheesecake
in NYC. She'll Fed Ex anywhere in the US. 1-800-521-CAKE or www.eileenscheesecake.com .
<Joan Nathan> That
sounds good.
<RENATTA> Thank you.
<Red> I found a great cheese cake recipe
the other day... learned a lot in the past few months.
<Joan Nathan> I
have a really good lemon cheesecake recipe.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> People ask me
all the time how to prevent cheesecakes from cracking. Any suggestions?
<Joan Nathan> You
open the oven door and let it cool awhile after it has baked.
It slowly cools. You can always cover it with strawberries.
<ChefTina> I also think that cracking
occurs when cheesecakes are over baked and/or baked too quickly.
<Red> Are these recipes also in your Baker book?
<Joan Nathan> The
recipes are in my baking book and some in my Foods of Israel and Jewish
Cooking In America . I keep trying new recipes because I
interview authentic, old, good cooks and try to continue their
recipes in a new way.
<Red> Good idea Joan ... I am using my
family as guinea pigs ... they don't seem to mind!
<noriza> It must be wonderful when you
are talking with some of the older cooks, and they "divulge" a
long-held family recipe, like finding a treasure.
<Red> That's the way I feel.
<Joan Nathan> Me
too.
<Joan Nathan>They
divulge recipes to me because I am going to make them immortal.
Very often they won't reveal them to family members.
<noriza> That is great!!!!
<Joan Nathan> I
feel as if the only way we are going to maintain our individuality
as a society is to have these old recipes carried on.
<noriza> I would think it would be hard
to write it all down fast enough!!!!!!
<Joan Nathan> It
is hard. I usually bring my laptop with me and a measuring cup.
You have to stop them.
<Red> Plus some older ladies give me
recipes more so because I am male ... they like the fact that
guys will be baking.
<Joan Nathan> Great!
Guys should be baking!
<Red> I like the uniqueness in the fact
I am a male baker.
<noriza> I also think they may see a
guy baking as not as big a "threat" to their domestic
prowess!!!!
<Joan Nathan> You
are onto something. I think these older cooks are threatened
by other family members, especially when they are old.
<ChefTina> Red, you will be happy to
know that we are enrolling more and more men of all ages into
our professional pastry course, here at FCI.
<Joan Nathan> What
do you like to bake?
<Red> Been doing pies mostly ... always
trying new crusts.
<Joan Nathan> Any
tips for me?
<Angela_PastryScoop> This is the best
time of the year for pies
<Red> I have a new bakery just started...so
I am collecting any and all recipes old and new.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Yes, pies! I'm
on a mission to find the ultimate apple pie recipe. I've been
baking a pie a week for the last 8 weeks and taking very careful
notes each time. I'm getting very close. I love pies, and it's
hard to find good examples.
<Angela_PastryScoop> Red: where is your
bakery?
<Red> Small town in Ohio. I have another
location opening soon ...well I hope.
<Angela_PastryScoop> Red: come on, plug
the bakery. You never know if someone on this chat is going to
be in Ohio looking for pie!
<Red> It's called SweetTreats.Com, in
Sycamore and Fostoria, Ohio.
<Joan Nathan> Red,
is it an online bakery?
<Red> Not yet, still fledgling; it is
a computer cafe and bakery.
<noriza> My grandmother was from Russia,
and she taught me to make challah. That started me on the road.
<Joan Nathan> Great.
Did she have any recipes?
<noriza> But when I mastered it, more
or less, she got very critical of my breads, and I realized later
that she must have been threatened, sort of, because that was
her claim to fame in her family.
<Joan Nathan> Noriza,
you are absolutely right. People can't believe that they share
with me. But I am no threat to their daily life.
<Joan Nathan> Challah
is the best. And it is best homemade. I use 2 eggs, 1/2 cup oil.
1 3/4 cup water, 1/2 cup sugar, about 8 cups flour and 1 tablespoon
of salt. I let it rise overnight. I think a slow rise is very
good. I use leftovers for bread pudding or french toast.
<Angela_PastryScoop> I made your apple
honey cake for Yom Kippur. It was so tasty.
<Joan Nathan> Which
one?
<Angela_PastryScoop> I think I found
it on-line
<Joan Nathan> Apple
desserts are very big in the Jewish repertoire, probably because
most of us came from central and eastern Europe and had apples
all year round. I have some great apple cakes. There was an old
recipe I learned in Israel called a grated apple torte.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Hey apple pie
lovers, have you tried baking with Macouns? I like using a mix
of Macouns and Cortlands.
<Red> I get excited when the smells (the
good ones) come from the ovens.
<Joan Nathan> You
know, you should taste an apple before you use it. Macouns and
Cortlands are great, and a mix is so good as well. With farmers
markets in the area, it's so much fun.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> Yes, I've been
chatting up all the farmers at the market for their recommendations.
Joan, do you have a favorite apple(s) for baking?
<Red> When tasting, the sweeter the better?
Or tart?
<Joan Nathan> How
about making apple strudel. I learned from the family that invented
the strudel. It is in the Foods of Israel Today .
<Red> Want to go there Joan, but still
looking for a good breading for it.
<Judiaann_PastryScoop> I learned how
to make the most incredible apple strudel at The French Culinary
Institute. One of the chef-instructors is from Austria, and he
showed us how to make something like 20 different kinds of strudel!
<noriza> I find baking to be the most
calming thing I could ever do.
<Joan Nathan> I
couldn't agree with you more. I feel connected to my roots and
to my soul when I touch dough.
<noriza> I am married to a Greek, so
I have been trying so many wonderful old world recipes for all
the celebration breads that they have. I feel like I am on a
treasure hunt.
I wish I had more time to do the actual baking.
<Joan Nathan> You
can always do baking in steps, depending on your time. I think
of my day and when I can work on whatever. I mean I fit baking
into my schedule.
<noriza> I understand. I think I have
to be more organized in my thinking and planning.
<Joan Nathan> You
do, but once you start it's easy. For example, tonight I have
20 people for dinner.
<Angela_PastryScoop> Noriza: that's one
of the best lessons I learned at The French Culinary Institute...it's
to prioritize and make a schedule for baking. At work and at
home.
<ChefTina> Thinking and planning are
the first steps to becoming a great baker. This is something
we like to focus on when teaching our classes here at FCI.
<Joan Nathan> You
got it.
<noriza> I guess I am not thinking ahead
much, when it comes to baking, I wait for the "urge" to
hit me!!!!
<Joan Nathan> Noriza,
I have to go back to cooking. I am testing recipes.
<maya> Hi, I'd like to ask about an Arab
bread that's been sold in the old city of Jerusalem. It is like
baigal but with lots of sesame seeds. I have been trying to make
it a few times, can you tell me how? Should the dough be very
sticky?
<Joan Nathan> Oh
I love that pita with za'atar on top. It is very easy to make
and one of the oldest breads to mankind. Here is the recipe:
1 tablespoon yeast, 1 cup water, 1/2 teaspoon sugar. Add 1 teaspoon
salt, 3 1/2 cups flour, 1/2 cup butter. Let it rise for an hour,
divide the dough into balls and shape into 10 inch long snakelike
pieces. Twist into rings, pinching the ends together. Place on
baking sheet and bake for 20 minutes in a 375 degree oven.
<maya> I have both of your books, and
I was very impressed with them. I am Israeli myself.
<Joan Nathan>Maya,
thanks.
<Angela_PastryScoop> Thank you so much
Joan this was very helpful as we get into the holiday season.
<Joan Nathan>This
was lots of fun. Let's do it again.
<Kate_PastryScoop> Joan, this is so helpful.
I think we've all learned so much!
<noriza> Please let's do this again!!!!!
<Joan Nathan> Thank
you all for being here with me.
<Kate_PastryScoop> Thank you!
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