February 29, 2012

Waffle Wednesday


Nutella Waffles with Peaches and Cream
(adapted from cakestudent)

Nutella Waffles
1 batch of waffle batter
1/3 cup nutella

Peaches and Cream
1 cup heavy whipping cream
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1 super ripe peach

For the nutella waffles
Mix the nutella in the waffle batter. Make the waffles according to your waffle maker.

For peaches and cream
In an electronic mixer, using the whisk attachment, whip up the cream until soft peaks form. Add the brown sugar, whip for a few more seconds until stiff peaks form.

Serve with the nutella waffles.

February 26, 2012

Woody Allen


"I'm not saying I didn't enjoy myself, but I didn't."


Patisserie

Patisserie No. 8
Laurent Duchêne
2, Rue Wurtz, 13th Arr.

I stumbled upon this place while walking to a park not too far from my apartment. The storefront had earthy, christmas colored goodies arranged in the window and thought it would be a sin not to give into the holiday spirit and buy a mini bûche de noël.

Patisserie Purchased: Bûche de Noël Marron Glacé
Cost: 480








For those who aren't hip to the cuisinier game, a bûche de noël is a spongey sheet cake that has been layered with a buttercream frosting, rolled up like a rug, and cut into pieces to shove in yo' mouf! 
And excusez-moi? Marrons glacés? Ya, those are chestnuts glazed and candied in sugar syrup. You will either love em or spit it out in the hand of the person who gave them to you. I just happen to like the heavy, gritty texture and earthy/nutty flavor of them candied. And thankfully I do, because this patisserie was jam packed with the stuff!

 These little bûches are the thicker, haute-couturer, French versions of the Twinkie. The cake casing was a tinge dry but the chestnut cream drizzled on top and and marron glacé paste filling compensated for it- leaving my mouth in a well balanced creamy chestnut nirvana. 

Scale from ONE to TEN:
SEVEN


February 22, 2012

Muse of the Month




Lana Turner

Born Julia Jean Turner on February 8, 1921 in Wallace, Idaho. Her family moved to San Francisco soon after Lana's birth.When Lana was 9, her father won some money playing a craps game, then tucked the money into his left sock and went back home. An hour or so later, he was found dead on a street corner with his left shoe and sock missing. The killer was never caught.

 After her father died in 1931, Lana and her mother moved to Los Angeles. When Lana was sixteen years old, she skipped a typing class while attending Hollywood High School and bought a Coca-Cola at the famous Top Hat Cafe down the street- she was spotted by William R. Wilkerson, the publisher of The Hollywood Reporter. Wilkerson referred her to actor/talent agent Zeppo Marx. His talent agency immediately signed her and casted her in her first film. 

Lana was married 7 times.
No. 1 Bandleader Artie Shaw (1940) They eloped on their first date and divorced 4 months later.
No. 2 Actor Joseph Stephan Crane (1942-1943, 1943-1944) Their first marriage was annulled after discovering Crane's previous divorce was not yet finalized. After a short separation, during which Crane attempted suicide, they re-married and conceived a daughter, Cheryl.
No. 3 Millionaire/Socialite Henry J. Topping Jr. (948-1952) Brother of Dan Topping, owner of the New York Yankees, and grandson of tin-plate magnate Daniel G. Reid, Henry proposed to Turner at the hip 21 Club in Los Angeles by dropping a diamond ring in her martini glass. 
No. 4 Actor Lex Barker (1953-1957) Lana divorced him after her daughter, Cheryl, claimed he repeatedly molested and raped her.
No. 5 Rancher Frederick May (1960-1962) Frederick was a member of the famous May Department-Store Family.
No. 6 Movie Producer Robert P. Eaton (1965-1969) Wrote a behind-the-scenes of Hollywood book, featuring a character based on Lana.
No. 7 Hypnotist/Con Artist Ronald Pellar (1969-1972) After Lana wrote him a $35,000 investment check, Pellar disappeared for days, using that money for personal purposes. He was later accused of stealing $100,000 worth of her jewelry. Pellar is known as one of the biggest American con artists. 

In 1957, Lana started dating Johnny Stompanato. After learning Stompanato was associated to the Los Angeles Mob, Lana quickly tried to break it off- however, he convinced her to stay. Their relationship turned violent and abusive. Later that year, Stompanato followed Lana to the set of her new movie with Sean Connery filmed in England. Stompanato stormed on set, waving his gun around, accusing Lana and Connery of having an affair. Connery punched Stompanato in the jaw and disarmed him. In 1958, Lana's 14 year old daughter, Cheryl, stabbed Stompanato to death in their Beverly Hills home. Fearing for her mother's life during a violent argument, Cheryl grabbed a kitchen knife and ran to Lana's defense.

Lana died in 1995, at the age of 74, at her home in Century City, Los Angeles, California due to throat cancer. In Lana's will, she left her daughter $50,000 and her her maid of 45 years, Carmen Cruz, $2.4 million.


Parisian Exploration

Shakespeare and Company
37 Rue de la Bûcherie, 5th Arr.

This bookstore was the mecca for Anglo-American writers in Paris during the 1920's. Writers such as Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Joyce and later Henry Miller spent a fair amount of their time here. Shakespeare and Company is mentioned in a lot of their publishings due to the boutique's stature in the literary world at the time. 
Needing a swank (english) read while in Paris, I decided to take a gander at this famed bookstore situated just a few feet from the Seine. Cramped, constricted, and narrow, my roommate Emma and I shuffled our way through the entrance and started searching for books. Daniel told me Tropics of Cancer by Henry Miller was a novel worth checking out. The book is almost in journal-jotting form. Miller, a struggling writer from New York living in 1940's Paris describes all his sexual ventures with hookers and hardships as he wonders the City of Light. It goes without saying, I was down. As I went to the cashier to pay, the American woman at the counter branded the inside of my book with the legendary Shakespeare and Company stamp and bid me ourvoir. Tropics of Cancer is now one of my favorite tokens of Paris.