Inspiration

Monday 4 April 2011

Paulina Abascal is a Mexican patisserie Chef who is recognise worldwide and since I've started my course I've looked at her work as a source of inspiration.
I love the way she combines the techniques she learned in France and the amazing flavours from Mexico, it's the perfect combination. Her book "Larousse de Los Postres" is amazing and really helps me see different things in patisserie.
Here's a passage from the book that I really liked and inspires me even more to do what I love the most.

Desserts are a gift, hapiness that can be shared, full of imagination and charm for all sences.
Through desserts emerge emotions, tastes, smells forgotten or new. Worlds are dicovered through their textures. Desserts truely reflect our history and escence; and with the person that cooks, he/she doesnt do it alone: he/she is surrounded by past generation, with all its knowledge and its advice, the knowledge aquired with exprience and the spirit that leads to experiment and create.

Food and TV

Monday 21 February 2011

It seems to me that recently British TV has been hit by this sudden cooking craze...

All i saw during christmas time was food programmes and today turning on the TV first thing I see is a new TV programme called 'cookery school'.
Cooking has now been turned into reality TV and I can assure it has a big hit, ever since Jamie's school dinners the food has been a major issue in Britain and mostly on TV especially on CH4.
CH4 has 4 chef's programme, Gordon Ramsay, Jamie Oliver, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and Heston Blumenthal. Each cook has a different approach to cooking.
Gordon Ramsay is a more harsh kind of chef always swearing but it gives you the idea that it's like that in well known restaurants.Jamie Oliver is more of a home and simple food made easy type of chef.Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall part from his long and unpronounsable surname is all about using local food and making the most of what's in season, and finally Heston Blumenthal is the experimental chef, he fall in the kind of molecular cuisine that we can see from Adria in Barcelona.
I hope that those show help people realise that making your own food and knowing how to choose proper ingredients is much better and fun than ready meals and take aways, even on a low budget and no time.

However I have to say that maybe a patisserie show should be made as most people love dessert and as I like to say life is too short to leave the dessert until the end!

Love

Monday 14 February 2011


As you can read from this blog i LOVE patisserie but today isn't about "I love patisserie day"...

Today is about the people you love, even if you should tell them everyday today is a special date to make more of an effort than normal and show the people around you you love them.

It's really weird how when u least expect it love comes and find you, i've learnt you don't have to search for it or look for signs it'll suddently appear when and where you least expect it. Everyone's stroy is different...

I won't tell mine but I can tell you i've never been happier with someone, he's the person I can talk to about anything, he might be far away but i knowhe'll always be there for me when i'm feeling low. I don't see myslef with someone else than him because i know he loves me as much as i love him. Yes, sometimes it's hard to have a long distance relationship but the best is the time we spend together, enjoy every second of it.

Being in love and getting love in returned is one of the most beautiful thing there is.

I hope that at one point you too will find the right person for you...

To the person I love, you're the most imporanta person in my life and you make me the happiest girl on earth!
M♥L



New Year...

Tuesday 1 February 2011

I've been meaning to write this post since the beginning of January but always ended up forgetting about it, so here it is...

My reflections of 2010...

Good and busy year, half of it in England doing a course i wasnt seeing myself doing it in the future and the other half in Chile doing something I love.



My mind was very confused with what I actually wanted to do in the future, I first chnaged the course I was doing in Leeds to just Languages ( Portuguese and Spanish). I love languagues and I love learning about new cultures and it also gave me the opportunity to travel and stay in each of the countries, this got me really excited until i saw the modules for the second year. Then resurged the idea of studying cooking or as I like to call it Culinary Arts. I decided in one week, just like that to change course.
My last week of holiday in Mexico was just spending time looking for courses and schools and checking emails for replys, answering phone calls from my concerned parents but they were really supportive and so was the rest of my family.



Came the day I started in Ecole, got so nervous for the first day of class but was really excited at the same time. I don't regret my change, and i'm loving the new experience and discovering a new culture and country. I've met amazing people that I know will make an impact in my life and I really enjoy the little community that we have at school, you can't really find that everywhere. My first practical at the school restaurant for a week really gave me new skills and it made me love what I do even more.







2010 went to fast that when I least expected it was the end of my first semester and coming back to the UK for christmas which I really enjoyed being back with my family (united). Cooked most days tradicional christmas food but was mostly getting ready for my 2011 January exam.




My exam didn't go well as I expected, I actually ended up crying. I wasn't happy with myslef, I didnt focus enough and all the negative things about my dish I could have easily made them better but that's what pressure does to you.

So this new year I want to focus more on what I'm doing, concentrate and just be better in general. I hope that the rest of 2011 is going to be better than this first month. I can't wait to start school again to get the enjoyment back of cooking because I think the exam kind of put me down and took away from me the joys of cooking. I'm also excited to start learning Japanese in march so we'll see how it goes!



Memories of 2010...














Anyway I wish everyone  Happy New Year (a month late...)

Copas de Chirimoya Feliz

Friday 19 November 2010


A month ago my fiend and I saw this little poster at school saying that we could participate in a cooking or patisserie competition. We had to give in a recipe to the teachers, the theme of the competiton this year was the "Bicentenario" of Chile so we had to make something tradicional but in the same way different. So here we go looking for tipical Chilean desserts, and we got really into the "Chirimoya Feliz".
"Chirimoya Feliz" is quite simple to make actually, it's only pieces of chirimoya with orange juice. So we had the idea of having 3 different texture in a cup or in culinary words a verrine but still using the same ingredients.
As first semesters we thought, we might as well give in our recipe see how it goes, but we never knew that we were going to be picked. I don't know how many recipes the teachers received but they could only choose 3, we were super excited and nervous at the same time as we were competing with people of 3rd an 4th semester.
Back to the preparation of our dessert. We practised quite a lot to see what would be the best combination for the 3rd layer and finally came to the decision that coffe was a pretty nice combination. We also asked advised to our teacher on the different extures we could apply. As we don't have the same skills as the other students which are more advanced we decided to stay quite simple. Basically the first layer starting from the bottom was a orange and passion fruit jelly, the 2nd a chirimoya compote and finally the last layer was a coffee plavoured merengue.
So here's the final result....


The day of the competition arrived and it was really stressing as when I got to school my partner was just getting out of bed so I had to start preparing everything, but then realised that the school had forgot to buy the Chirimoya which to be honest was the most important ingredient, the only thing they had was chirimoya pulp, they could have gone and bought some from the supermarket but they would have been to hard and with no taste at all so the pulp was better than nothing. The pulp was in fact the only problem we had during the day, we heated it was we would have with the chirimoya flesh but compared with it it was much more runny so we were panicking a little bit, thankfully teh school had called some of the older student which had already left the school to come and help us, which saved our day. The person that helped us even helped us make orange confit which was a new skill for us.
Presenting our dessert to the jury was nerve racking, it is exactly as you can see on TV, thank god we didn't have a Gordon Ramsay in front of us, I would have actually cried... They didn't say much and kept a neutral face.



In the end we got 3rd place but we were proud of ourselves to have come this far and the teacher congratulated us too. Overall it was an awsome expirience and opportunity. Here's a little photo of us when we got our prices and medals :).

Partners for lifeee

Monday 25 October 2010


I met this girl 2 month ago when I started in my new school and i have to say she is pretty A-W-S-O-M-E...
Not only do we get along and work well together but we both share the same love for cooking or more specificly patisserie. 
It's this kind of people I love meeting and that I know will make an impact in my life, it's only been 2 months but we have already shared great moments and I hope that in the next 2 years that we have together our friendship will continue to grow.

Belonging

Friday 24 September 2010

It starts for me when people ask me " Where are you from?", I just never know what to answer, French Mexican I reply, then comes all the questions about why and when, then I have to go through all the countries I have lived in and born. Everytime I meet someone new they're like "wow! that's so cool", maybe it is at the begining and I cant really complain to be honest but this is my most important question I ask myself and the one that keeps coming back " Where am I really from?" which kind of links to the question "Where do I belong?".

In my heart I feel like I am mexican more than I am french but I have never lived in Mexico, most of my family lives there, the most special person to me also lives there, it's where I feel more like home.
Travelling around makes you meet lots of new people but that doesn't mean they'll be your closest friends, and yes it's cool to travel around, discover new cultures, new ways of life but it's always good to come back home or at least that's what I think. Most people I know think the place they live is shit but you don't realise what you have until it's gona as they say. The place I call "home" at the moment is in England, been there for seven years which is most of my teenage years, I love it there and I have some of my best friends there but sometimes I feel like I don't really belong there.

That's what I am feeling at the moment, I feel like I don't really belong anywhere, which makes me feel empty...

Im very open minded to all the changes that have happened in my life and grateful that they have happened but the feeling of not belonging, not having somewhere to identify me from just makes me sad. It may sound pathetic to you but for me it's important.


"The hunger to belong is not merely a desire to be attached to something.  It is rather sensing that great transformation and discovery become possible when belonging is sheltered and true."