Posts Tagged ‘food art’

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What is Wednesday’s Wonderment?

November 30, 2016

“Building a gingerbread house is a common family tradition for the holidays, but Nemacolin Woodlands Resort has taken the tradition to a whole new level this year.

Visitors can walk through the doors of the life-size gingerbread house, which is built with 500 pounds of flour, 600 pounds of powdered sugar, 10 gallons of eggs and 200 pounds of assorted candy.

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Photo shows the building under construction

Pastry chef Scott Tennant headed up the effort to build and decorate a 12-by-12-by-14-foot gingerbread house inside the lobby of Chateau Lafayette, one of the Farmington resort’s hotels.

The resort’s carpenters started the process in October by building a complete wooden house in two- to three-foot sections that could be separated, carried through the lobby’s front doors piece by piece, and reconnected.

By mid-November, the pastry shop was busy cranking out 2,500 gingerbread bricks. The workers laid the bricks against the wooden walls, plastering them together with royal icing “mortar.” That’s about 700 to 800 pounds of gingerbread.

Pastry makers decorated the outside of the house with Gummies, hard candies and other confections. Mr. Tennant said the workers aimed to add splashes of color without going “over the top” so they could create a relatively realistic effect.

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The final gingerbread bakery

Indoors, the house has gingerbread planks resembling paneling along the lower third of the walls, with a gingerbread chair rail lined with candy. A baker will offer samples inside the gingerbread house for a few hours each day through Jan. 1, and on Jan. 2 the house will come down.

For several years, Nemacolin has built gingerbread displays: a castle, a train, a Snoopy’s Christmas display, and last year, a large gingerbread house. But this is the first year the resort has built something the public can actually walk through.

When the resort first started making gingerbread displays a few years ago, all work was done in secret, behind a curtain. When workers decided to change things up and construct their displays out in the open, they immediately attracted a following. People would stop by to watch the process and exclaim over how good the gingerbread smelled.

“The workers would take extra pieces and put frosting on them and give them to people,” Mr. Tennant said.

That’s what got him thinking about building something people could walk inside.

The final product has taken a team of 15 people a total of 600 to 800 hours to make.

By the numbers:

600 pounds powdered sugar

500 pounds flour

200 pounds assorted candy

120 pounds honey

120 pounds molasses

110 pounds brown sugar

60 pounds shortening

15 gallons egg whites

10 gallons eggs

6 pounds baking soda

5 pounds ginger

3 pounds allspice

3 pounds cinnamon

From the Post-Gazette, courtesy Robb

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What am I Lego-loving?

October 13, 2016

Functional, stackable, edible gummy Legos – I can’t wait to try this!

 

 

from ZME Science

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What am I decorating?

March 10, 2016

One day when I was in first grade, I think it was for Valentine’s Day, we spent the afternoon decorating graham crackers. I thought they were the most delicious thing I had ever tasted.  In my memory, they looked just like this.

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Here is Mezesmanna on Instagram also on Facebook, via This is Colossal

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What am I sappy cat blogging?

January 22, 2016

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“Happiness and the absurd are two sons of the same earth,” said Albert Camus. “They are inseparable.” Indeed, absurdity does have a way of instilling happiness in us. Take, for example, Nekozushi, the brainchild of Japanese company Tange & Nakimushi Peanuts (a name that’s equally absurd).

This wonderful collection of sushi cats is from Spoon and Tomago

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What did I find?

December 3, 2015

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The new crop of halos are in the grocery store!

Halos is the new name for Cuties.  Cuties is a marketing term for mandarins.

Mandarins are one of the three basic types of citrus fruit (mandarin, citron, pummelo).  Everything else you find in the store is a back cross from these types.  Actually the mandarins that are Cuties or Halos are also probably hybrids.

credit Tracy L. Kahn at UC Davis

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What am I Lego-loving?

June 25, 2015

 

Oh, yes!  Lego-loving and food art, all in one! From Grant Thompson – “The King of Random”

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What am I making?

May 27, 2015

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 This recipe is from tablespoon.com

Spiked Rainbow Ribbon Salad

Ingredients

4 1/2 cups water, divided
6 packages (3 oz) flavored gelatin dessert mix
3 envelopes plain gelatin (6 tsp gelatin powder, divided)
3 cups flavored rum or vodka, divided
1 1/8 cups vanilla yogurt, divided

Directions

  • Place the bottle of liquor in the freezer for several hours before beginning recipe.
  • Lightly spray bundt pan or gelatin mold with non stick cooking spray (I used a 10 cup bundt pan). Wipe off the excess spray with a paper towel. A slight residue should remain, just enough to help unmold your gelatin, without affecting the taste or appearance.
  • Pour 3/4 cup water into a saucepan and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon of the plain gelatin. Allow gelatin to soak for a minute or two. Heat over low heat, stirring constantly, until gelatin is dissolved (about 5 minutes). Whisk in the first package of flavored gelatin. Whisk for at least 2 minutes, or until completely dissolved (I find the sugar free mix dissolves much faster than the regular).
  • Remove from heat. Add 1/2 cup of the cold liquor, and stir to combine.
  • Pour 3/4 cup of the gelatin mixture into the prepared mold, and place in refrigerator. Allow to set for 20 to 30 minutes, until the gelatin is a little firm, but still sticks when touched. Very important – if the layers set up too much, the next layer won’t bond appropriately.
  • Refrigerate the remaining gelatin mixture in bowl about 5 minutes or until slightly thickened (consistency of unbeaten egg whites). Gradually stir in 3 tablespoons of yogurt and stir until well blended. This cooling step is also important – the gelatin must be cooled to room temperature before adding on top of other layers, or the layers will not be well defined!
  • Gently spoon the gelatin/yogurt mixture over set gelatin and return to the refrigerator. Refrigerate about 15 minutes or until gelatin is set but not firm (again, it should stick to finger when touched). As the layers progress, the setting time will become shorter as the pan and gelatin becomes colder, and the layers become thinner as more layers are added to the mold.
  • Repeat steps with remaining gelatin flavors, for a total of 12 alternating clear and creamy gelatin layers.
  • After completing all the layers, refrigerate the gelatin overnight. To unmold, fill a larger container or clean sink with warm water (not too hot!). With clean fingers, loosen the gelatin around the edges of the mold cavities. Next, dip the mold almost to the edge into the warm water for just a few seconds (10 seconds worked for me). Dry the bottom of the mold with a towel and check the edges to see if they are loose. If not, repeat the dip for just a few seconds. Place your serving plate on top of the mold and invert. Voila!

 

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I did not really make this.  I thought I was going to, but it looks like too much work, and I am not all that fond of jello.  But isn’t it great looking?

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What am I knitting?

May 11, 2015

 

Okay – it is not knitting, it is crocheting.  And it is in Japanese, but you get the idea.

From Spoon and Tomago

Youtuber betibettin recently created a tutorial on how to make ramen. The final product looks so yummy that you can’t help but feel hunger pains. The only thing is, he’s not a chef and his ramen isn’t edible. Try and you’ll end up with a mouth full of yarn. Betibettin is a power crocheter and his latest creation is a bowl of ramen created entirely from yarn. The only thing that’s not yarn is a thin piece of cellophane place over the noodles for added soup-effect.

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knit-ramen-6Rice noodles

 

knit-ramen-ingredientsRoast pork, egg, scallions, bamboo shoots

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What am I sappy cat blogging?

April 24, 2015

Hello Kitty Dim Sum Restaurant in Hong Kong

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If you love dumplings as much as you love Hello Kitty, it’s time to book a flight: the first Hello Kitty dim sum restaurant in the world is now open in Hong Kong.

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Hello Kitty Chunanoki opened in Yaumatei on April 16 and fans waited for hours to snag one of the 80 seats so they could enjoy some of the 37 Hello Kitty dim sum options. Every part of the restaurant is themed, from the tables, glass chandeliers, to the wall artwork. Even the chopstick holders are shaped in the form of Hello Kitty’s iconic hair bow.

For devoted fans, Hello Kitty decor simply isn’t enough, sometimes you just want to eat her face. I say that in the most adoring of ways. The restaurant serves traditional dim sum items, all with a Hello Kitty twist. Rice and noodle dishes come family-style in the shape of her head, while traditional dim sum options like custard-filled steamed buns and pork bao are irresistible when adorned with Hello Kitty’s wide-eyed expression.

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Cuteness knows no bounds when you open up the lid of a bamboo steamer and see steaming Hello Kitty manju staring back at you. Even the popular dim sum dish har gow gets the Hello Kitty treatment. The thinly wrapped plump shrimp dumplings somehow taste even better when embellished with tiny pink edible bows.

The restaurant will only be open for a 2-3 month trial period so Hello Kitty fans will have to act fast to get their kawaii dim sum fix. Check out the video above for an up close look at the interior and unabashed kitty-adorableness.

Images via Jetsoclub and Kotaku

Credit: Jenn Fujikawa

And Cynthia Moore

Reblogged from Nerdist

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What am I sappy cat blogging?

March 13, 2015