Beary cute macarons

Bear Macarons

I finally decided to try to make macarons again. I made these last weekend as a possibility for Jennys virtual baby shower and halfway through I decided to make the baby cake pops instead. You might even recognize them as the inspiration for the bears I made on her baby cake pop bibs. : )

I wasnt going to post these because I didnt get them just quite right. The feet seemed too tall, they were too brown on some of the edges, but mostly they were too hollow inside. Too fragile.

But they were also too cute. So I finished decorating them because one day I will get these little guys perfect. I just have to figure out the right combination of factors to work in my favor. Macarons are finicky. You can have too much almond flour, egg white, or sugar. You can whip them too long. Fold them too long and a number of other things including humidity, oven temp and age of your egg whites. Guess I just need another hands on lesson from Tartelette they worked great when I made them with her. But on my own. I havent had the inside texture work out how I want them.

I used the recipe and directions for the macarons from this post. It works. I just need to make some tweaks on my end.

Try it or use a macaron recipe that works for you. Id love for you to share a link below if you have one you really like.

So anyway, heres how I made them into little bears they were inspired by the cutest little bunny macarons I found through pinterest.

Bear Template

First, I used a template to draw my bear shapes on parchment paper. Place the drawn side face down on the cookie sheet when you bake.

Heres the template if youd like it.

Macarons

Pipe your shapes and let them set for a few minutes. A skin will start to form on the top that creates the shell and feet once they bake.

Heres a link to some helpful macaron info from Tartelette.

Piping Macarons

Last time I used a larger tip, but this time I used a Wilton #10 tip so I could control the size of the ears better. The batter flows pretty easily and I didnt want jumbo ears.

Piping Macarons

If you let the skin form on the head for just a couple of minutes first, you can easily pipe the ears on either side. If you pipe everything at the same time, they wont be as defined. Theyll look blobby. Blobby bears.

Pipe and repeat.

And bake.

Blue Bear Macarons

Then when they hopefully come out great, you can just decorate.

In progress

You can use candy coating to pipe on the bottom half of the faces.

Chocolate chip noses

While its still wet, place a mini chocolate chip in position for the nose and let dry.

Bear Macarons

Then draw on the eyes and mouth with an edible ink pen and sandwich the macarons with chocolate ganache.

Even though these arent perfect, I hope the pictures will help you make some macarons that are beary cute.

I think theyd be adorable for a baby shower and so pretty in all pastel colors.


Hokkaido Gantetsu Ramen @ Changi Airport Terminal 3, Singapore

After spending the morning travelling from KL, we finally land in Changi Airport in Singapore. We decided to explore the dining options in the airport before heading into the city.

I remember that there was a Ramen Champion in the airport. It is located in Terminal 3. Upon entering the restaurant, you will be given a card each (which will be swiped when making purchases and you give it to the cashier upon exiting).

There are 4 different ramen vendors in the restaurant - Taka No Tsume, Gantetsu, Ramen Riki and Ikkousha (which has recently been voted as Singapore's first Ultimate Ramen Champion 2011). At that time, I was not familiar with any of these brands so I just picked one at random.

Our choice was Gantetsu whichhails from Sapporo in Hokkaido, Japan and I was drawn to them since I favour Hokkaido style ramen noodles.In Japanese, Gantetsu means stubbornness and it is said that Chef Masaki is stubborn and adamant about using only a specific ingredients such as a special miso from Hokkaido, salt and soy sauce. Gantetsu has been awarded winner for best ramen for 3 conservative years in Sapporo.

Gantetsu's King Cha Shu Ramen


Menu at Gantetsu


After placing your order, you will be given a buzzer which will vibrate when your ramen is ready.


Miso, salt and soy sauce are important ingredients in Gantetsu's Ramen



We picked Gantetsu's King Cha Shu Ramen (S$15) and it was good for two to share (since we just wanted a quick bite as it was late afternoon). The ramen noodles is topped with a broth which has been boiled for at least 6 hours, cha shu, shredded ginger, bamboo shoot, beansprouts, egg, seaweed and spring onions.

The noodles are curly and springy and I found the broth to be rather satisfying. The flavouring was just nice, and we slurped up every last bit of the broth. The ramen came with 5 thick slices of cha siu pork which was lean but flavorful. Possibly the most generous serving of cha siu I've ever come across in a ramen - a whopping 200g!The seaweed used for this dish is also unique to Gantetsu. It also came with 2 egg halves - definitely a generous bowl of ramen.



Good to the last drop

Gantetsu also has an outlet in Eat Paradise in Isetan, 1Utama Malaysia, so I'd definitely be visiting their outlet there to try their ramen.



Sunrise in KL


On the way to KLIA -we saw a rainbow! ;)


Almost there





Verdict: Broth is nicely flavoured and ramen had nice texture. Cha siu comes in very generous portion.


Opening times: 10.30am - 11.00pm

Location: Gantetsu, Ramen Champion, 65 Airport Boulevard, #B2-58 Terminal 3, Singapore Changi Airport, Singapore 819663

Tel: +65 6214 2958

Nearest MRT: Changi Airport

Website:http://www.gantetu.co.jp/

5 Scariest Filipino Pulutan - Filipino Foods With High Cholesterol


Pu Tien, One Utama Shopping Mall

PuTien1

Lunch with bfs family, we ordered Set A & Set B with other ala carte dishes.

PuTien2

Iced Abalone

PuTien3

Jelly Fish in XO Sauce

PuTien4

Bittergourd in ice to be dipped into honey syrup, slightly bitter taste

PuTien5

cockles with loads of garlic(~RM9.90), yummy!

PuTien6

Bamboo Herbal prawn, very fresh and very delicious soup base

PuTien7

Loh Mee, very nice with loads of ingredients like clam, prawns etc

PuTien8

Yam dish

PuTien9

Deep fried pig trotter in salt and pepper, similar toGermanpork knuckle, crispy outside and soft inside

PuTien10

sweet and sour pork with lychee, just ok

PuTien11

Heng Hwa noodle, very nice as well, their noodle dishes are superb

PuTien12

doubled boiled papaya with snow fungus (Hashima)

PuTien13

Overall, i find their food are very nice and reasonably priced.
Address: Pu Tien

G213 A, Ground Floor, Promenade,

1 Utama Shopping Centre (Old Wing)

Bandar Utama, 47800 Petaling Jaya

Telephone: 03-7722 1539

Post by other blogger:

Eat Drink KL

CC Food Travel

Dai Kah Sek

Be Bulat

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Portugals pastel de nata tart: a crisis-buster?

A Pastel de nata, Lisbon's typical pastry is displayed next to a box from the brand Nata at the Nata's Cafe in Lisbon on August 10, 2012. AFP/Relaxnews
LISBON, Aug 26 It may seem an unlikely way to help Portugal out of recession but a local group has launched an international coffee house chain to sell the countrys much-loved custard tart around the globe.

Even Lisbons economy minister has placed his bets on the export appeal of pastel de nata, a rich, round egg custard in a flaky crust that was first baked a few centuries ago.

Sprinkled with cinnamon and icing sugar, the tiny pastry for one is sought by locals and tourists alike. Over the years, it has become a source of national pride, resonant of languid days in Lisbon cafes sipping coffee and snacking on a nata.

Pastel de nata is one of Portugals most emblematic products and despite its success, why have we never managed to export it? Economy Minister Alvaro Santos Pereira asked a panel of Portuguese businessmen at a January meeting.

Urging them to think international, Pereira said that American hamburgers and donuts have been marketed around the world with wild success.

Why cant we do the same with a typical Portuguese product like nata, he asked?

The country, whose economy is set to shrink by 3.0 per cent this year, is struggling to stabilise strained public finances with the help of a 78-billion-euro (RM351 billion) EU-IMF debt bailout.

And like other eurozone countries in difficulty, Lisbon too is counting on exports to get the economy growing again and run a trade surplus an important contributor to growth.

Unbeknownst to Pereira, a franchiser called Be-business had already drawn up plans to promote pastel de nata abroad.

The truth is that we had already been working on the project for a few months when the minister made his statement, said Nuno Seabra,! one of project managers.

The world needs nata

Local lore holds that nata was first made in a Catholic monastery in Belem, a Lisbon neighbourhood and port from where some of Portugals great explorers once set off.

Convents and monasteries kept chickens for eggs whose whites were used for starch, leaving lots of leftover yolks that were turned into sweet pastries, including nata.

In the 19th century, a Belem bakery was the first to actually sell the tart and, thanks to the busy port, its fame spread in and out of the country, including faraway places where Portuguese had settled like Brazil and Mozambique.

Egg tarts popular today in Hong Kong and mainland China are said to have evolved from nata first tasted in nearby Macau when it was still a Portuguese colony.

The Belem bakeshop, reputedly Portugals best nata bakers thanks to a recipe kept secret since the 19th century, still exists, drawing hundreds of visitors daily.

And despite pressure, it has never divulged its recipe and always refused to export, believing its artisanal confection was ill-suited to mass production.

In recent years, copy-cat natas have cropped up around the world, sometimes under other names or recipes that little resemble the original. Be-business decided the time was right to create an international chain based on the pastry called Nata Lisboa.

It tested recipes for months until it found the good one that will be used in each franchise.

The DNA of our concept is the city of Lisbon, said Seabra. In our cafes you can also find several typical products such as bica, a Lisbon-style espresso, or ginginha, a liquor made from cherries.

The first opened in June in Lisbons old town, a must on the tourist circuit, with another 10 set to open around Portugal by the end of the year.

The first foreign Nata Lisboa will open in Paris in the coming months, said Seabra, followed by Brazil, North America and Asia by 2016.

Seabra is matter-of-factly confident. Th! e world needs nata, he said, quoting the chains slogan. AFP/Relaxnews


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Under Wraps Champagne Bottles

Under Wraps Champagne Bottles

A whole mass of bottles about to be served blind for approval or dismissal at the English leg of the Naked Wines Zero to Hero Tasting. Technically of couse, them wines being English, they are sparkling wines not champers. The winner of this tasting was the Bolney Estate Cuve Ros 2009 still available from Naked for a smidge over 20 a bottle. Next month Naked are holding another such tasting with Argentina being the focus.

Under Wraps Champagne Bottles is the latest in the Sunday Snapshots series of photographs with a wine related theme, whether bottles, glasses, vineyards or the back scenes of wineries.

English Sparkling Wines under wraps, Naked Wines Tasting

Spittoon.biz - A UK Wine Blog - We Spit... So You Can Swallow