I was a line cook for 13 years. I can tell you’ve really grown as a cook. It’s funny watching someone realize that recipes don’t always have to be followed precisely. and then sometimes having to redo it because recipes have to be followed precisely.
It comes with experience. When you know what is happening with the food, and why you are doing certain things, it becomes easier to determine what can be changed or messed with. I was also a cook for about 6 years, and cook most of my food at home, and incessantly watch cooking videos, so I have a good sense of what to do. A recipe like this can be altered quite a bit. Using different fruits, different creams, different breads or cakes, or different glazes. Imagine a coconut cream meringue filling with a lime flavored cake and a mango glaze! 🤗
This is why I always disagree when people make statements like "all human knowledge is available on the internet." Le Marly fell through the cracks until this video was made, even though at one time it was famous enough to make it into a celebrity chef's cookbook. Just imagine how many other cakes are out there in the analog world to be discovered! And I guess other things besides cakes...
There's a huge amount of research and knowledge of Home Economics that is not on the internet ... the whole field faded into obscurity in the 1980s. [Just about the time I became a stay at home mom, and wanted to research how to best maintain my household.] I have both volumes, plus one of Julia's later TV series cookbooks. I've made many of her dishes (the simpler ones!) and everything was good.
The only thing that hasn't changed and needs to is how underrated your channel is... Your baking skills?! HUGE turnaround. This has inspired me to do something that I love and just keep doing it - the growth will come. I can't wait to watch this! Continue to be awesome
@@antichef I would have put a dollop of the whipped cream at the end of each piece and then centered a strawberry in each dollop (which I think is what Julia intended), but I LOVE the rustic look you created! Since you changed it, perhaps you could name it Le Marley de Provence, as that makes me think of the provinces or the more rural, rustic life, rather than the fancier life de Paris.
I wish you would do a halfblood prince version of Julia’s cookbook, where you scribble in the margins the corrections and things that worked for you cause that would be the perfect marriage of this fanciful, magical journey and reality that we could all cherish and use. I would for sure buy it.
Being able to make brioche by hand simply means you're an accomplished genius. That was art. Thank you for going through that so I could see it being done.
Your take on brioche strawberry shortcake, with it's final and PERFECT simplicity of icing sugar instead of yet more whipped cream, is a recipe changer. Kudos to you, not-so-anti-chef! 👏
Brioche can feel like total chaos even when you're doing it exactly right! I'm really impressed! Let's just say I wouldn't put my first attempt out there on YT, it was not this successful. 😂
I don't think it's his first attempt but he seems to display an amazing attitude toward learning, and a humble confidence in the wisdom of more experienced people that his audience grows from.
Just got home from a VERY long RN shift and am currently sitting in the dark watching random You Tube videos to decompress. This video was exactly what I needed!!!! I laughed, empathized and now want to order a Julia Child’s cookbook! Thank You! Subscribed!
There is a grainy image of it in a McCall's Magazine from 1970 on Internet Archive. It was prepared by Julia and is served in a earthenware looking dish with only the domed top -- which is covered completely in piped cream and studded with strawberries -- exposed.
Beautifully done. Bravo! This is a riff of a tarte tropézienne, which is normally filled with crème diplomat or a crème mousseline. Brioche is normally classified as a viennoiserie/pastry and is generally made with a softer flour (T55/T45) for a cakier crumb. I have a hunch this version of the tarte may be inspired by a dessert Julia Child had at a café or bistro called Le Marly? Just a guess 🤷🏻♀️.
@@runswithbeer yes but that's part of the Louvre complex and opened in the 90s. I'm assuming Julia would have had it somewhere in the South because that's where the dish originates from.
Your Julia child's recipes have reminded me of great recipes my french grandparents used to make that nobody prepares anymore. I am definitely ordering Julia's child's books now.
I made the Le Marly and figured out what to do with the leftover bread. Roughly crumble it up and place it in two ramekins. Soak it with the leftover rum simple syrup and place in the refrigerator for a few hours. Cut up any leftover strawberries and whip up a small batch of Chantilly cream - combine with strawberries and spoon over the brioche right before serving. Grab a spoon and enjoy. Must admit it took me two days to make the Le Marly but it was well worth it. Love your videos - you are an inspiration to all us aspiring home cooks who want to up their game.
This was definitely a triumph...most definitely a triumph!!! I cook a lot, and am always taken with how you figure out the processes and things that are new to you...Bravo, my boy!! : ) This turned out spectacularly, I would say. Wish I could have enjoyed a slice with you! : )
Chantilly is a small city North of Paris. Theoretically it's whipped cream + (actual) vanilla + sugar. And it's pronounced chanti-yi. Hi from Paris btw, love your channel !
What I love about you is how messy and cavalier you are even with regard to the hardest techniques!! I love how you throw your pots and pans and bowls around, and you slap the dough with such unbridled enthusiasm. This is how we non-professional cooks do it. Keep it up!
The combination of whipped cream and vanilla would take its name from a castle, the Castle of Chantilly, which inhabits the northern part of France and which gave, in the eighteenth century, the name to a village that rose right at its feet.
This is one of your most beautiful desserts yet! A+++ 🎖 I am 75% French, although American by birth, and this reminds me of the desserts my mother used to make. Your brioche was a dream and my mouth was literally watering watching you make this. C'est magnifique! ❤👨🎨👏👏👏
Recently watching JC, you popped into the fray, and I must state that am enjoying you. I love how you throw yourself down onto the counter, snatch open the fridge, etc., which suggests your heavy-handedness, that you probably break things because of your ungentleness, which is cute to see, somewhat childlike. It also doesn't hurt that you're quite easy on the eyes. Keep up the good work. You're good at and made for this.
Jamie, Well Done!! I made brioche two or three times a month for many years. I have the two Julia Childs books you are using, don't remember running across this recipe and am disappointed. This would have been repeated many times. To thump bread, use your middle finger, held back your thumb and flick your finger to thump the bread. Thanks for this video.😋
Love your channel. I like how you show that not everything is so easy & that having to check the recipe with sticky buttery hands is a normal ‘oh s**t’ regular occurance for us amateur bakers. 👍 subscribed.
Good job. I thought for sure you were overworking that brioche dough during the butter phase, but nope! A testament to your growing expertise. Congratulations. I especially liked your introducing your grumpier self, lol.
wow, you totally rocked it out on this one! your brioche looks superb! (yes, is a bit of a shame that all the middle gets scraped out to make the bowl, but i'm sure you found a good use for it, i.e. into your mouth immediately!). You are truly becoming a gourmet baker, and that ain't no lie! Bravo!
Just a suggestion, salt kills yeast really aggressively, so when activating your yeast, just give it milk and sugar to eat. Add the salt to the flour for the best rise. Love your channel. ❤️
Chantilly cream (pronounced as shawn- tee) is basically the same as whipped cream but generally with added sugar and/or a flavoring. It was invented in the French village of Chantilly specifically for the visit of King Louis XIV. I was always taught that in making whipped cream, you start off with your beaters at slow speed then gradually increase the speed. With egg whites, you do the opposite by starting out at a high speed and gradually decrease the speed. That has always worked for me.
Amazing man, I grew up with these books in my house. My mother's obviously. I tried to make a few things from them, and mom always always made chantilly cream with strawberries. Its amazing. Thank you for bringing back my childhood in one fail swoop!
Another great video! I love your content. All sugar is made from cane but some brands are less refined which is why they will have a tan or light brown tinge to it. In the sugar refining process, "raw" sugar is spun to remove the molasses which then makes white sugar. Brown sugar is made by spraying that molasses back onto white sugar and depending on how much, we get light or dark brown sugar. What people in the UK call castor sugar is simply white granulated sugar that is more finely processed to produce smaller crystals which is thought to be easier to incorporate into recipes. I've used both and they don't seem to make much of a difference to me.
Oh some countries mainly use sugar beet. A very sweet white beet. I don't know what's common where Jamie stays. But yes for the color. I use cane sugar (basically regular sugar to me) and it doesn't have a brown tinge.
@@FutureCommentary1 Thanks for the correction. I should have mentioned I was refering mainly to sugar in the U.S and the brown tinge is a by product of pressed sugar cane. The full process has a few more steps, I gave the reader's digest version. 😃
White or granulated sugar in the US is equally likely to be made from sugar beets as it is from sugarcane. The molasses in brown sugar, however, is (to my knowledge) pretty much always from sugar cane.
Your content, quality, editing ability, cooking knowledge/ now learnt…. Is just brilliant and so easy to watch and learn from. You deserve your own tv programme… I hope that happens….
Chantilly is a small town north of Paris it might now be under the auspices of Paris now. It has a chateau and in that chateau they made sweetened whipped cream hence its French name Crème Chantilly. It is just sweetened whipped cream.
AAAH! New subscriber here, so happy that I have this weird combo with your channel where I can correct you and simultaneously be impressed by you? You've grown so much as a baker and cook! And you share your mistakes, which I need to get better at. Very admirable you're tackling Child. And your 'bowl me' cuts are flawless.
I remember watching her with my Nana after school & on the weekends I love baking because of her. You do her recipes justice some ppl try to make things their own & take credit or ruin the recipe; I love you don't. I love when ppl pay homage to the ppl who did the leg work & set the standards. New but already love your videos.
Jamie, this was so much fun! Le Marly looked gorgeous and apparently tasted incredible. 11 out o10! You are such a ball to watch. I love how humble you are about what you know and don't know . Thank you for making these excellent videos!
Really good work! Again, so proud of you for your tenacity. Re the thumping, pretty sure Julia meant to thump the bottom with your finger - not drop the bread repeatedly on your cutting board. ;)
For all that work I'd probably bake both halves at once and freeze the second one. If I understood correctly about you halving the dough.... Looked aMAZing
Just for future reference, since I've seen it happen twice now, adding salt to your yeast slurry is an anachronism and should never be done. Add the salt to the flour base mixture instead. Yeast and salt just really dislike each other. Another future tip is using a teaspoon, preferably a serrated "grapefruit" spoon, if you can find one, will make prepping those strawberries far less of a chore.
This looks amazing! I am possibly wrong but I believe that the difference with regular whipped cream and Chantilly cream is that Chantilly is sweeter, has more sugar. Like I said I am not sure, other than that it looks great.
Dude I love baking but this really makes me wanna invest in a cookbook. You were on my recommended page and I was so shocked your videos don’t go viral more !!! Keep it uppp
Every stinkin’ time I watch one of your videos I want to run down to the kitchen and whip up that same recipe. The only problem is that I generally watch RUclips videos after getting ready to sleep and lying in bed! I guess that way it’s better on my waistline since I never leave the bed before drifting off to sleep without setting foot in the kitchen. This strawberry shortcake looks like an absolute MUST TRY next time strawberries are in season
I just wanted to say, I made this following your steps in this video and its the best damn thing I've ever baked. Thank you so much for documenting the experience, it really helped me put my hands to work with more confidence.
As a great british bake off lover, I finally know how to make all of the different doughs (brioche, puff pastry, savarin, genoise), sauces, glazes, and frostings they always reference thanks to your channel. Thanks for the great content.
LOL thump (tap) the bottom of the bread with your fingers to listen for the hollow sound, in case no one else has mentioned this! I love how you just threw it on the board to see if it's hollow, that made me laugh so much, thank you! I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!!!
Ironically, you said this dessert was nowhere to be found anywhere else... even though I have the same cookbook I can't remember even seeing it in there. I must go check again. It's outstanding all the same. Ps, I think the instruction to "thump" for doneness it is more of a tap of the finger on the bottom of the loaf rather than dropping the loaf.
Hi Jamie, I really enjoy your videos - and Julia’s food, books, everything. Crème chantillie is sweetened whipped cream whereas we in Europe usually makes whipped cream plain: no sugar, no vanilla. To me, it has a fresher and lighter taste than the standard North American super sweetened type.
Oh hey I just realized my mom had this book. I remember the mustard crusted roast she made using a paste of dry mustard with bacon fat. Another unforgettable gem was the chicken livers in onions... I am not a liver loving woman but I ate that. It had enough cream in it for a Ukrainian wedding feast......oh no wait. That was MaDam Benoit. This looks e extremely similar....I wonder if they were published by the same company....squints at the cover...ps....when you thump bread you turn it upside down and tap the bottom with your finger. That's what mom did. Wow this looks so yummy.
Great video, the cake looked fabulous. To my knowledge, this cake is unknown in France, but is very close to what we call a "fraisier" nowadays, which is a very popular cake (very common for birthdays) that includes similar ingredients and composition, except for the alcohol, as desserts tend to contain less and less alcohol these days. I think that's why you couldn't find any reference to the cake online. Plus fraisier is a bit richer maybe, as the chantilly cream is usually mixed with a creme patissière (kind of thick custard). I'd really like to try that version someday.
I made a peach version today. Haven't sealed it with apricot glaze, I hope I'm not sorry about that. It inspired me to look at Vol II. It's been on the shelf for years, but I only cook from Vol 1. I'll start looking.
So thanks for introducing me to this recipe . I’ve been ignoring volume 2. It really is delicious and the group I served it to thought so as well. I don’t think I can have shortcake without brioche again. It just tastes bette.
Man that's one beautiful dessert! I'd love to try to make this. It's beautiful and looks delicious! Your cooking skills have really come so far. I've absolutely loved catching up to current videos of this series.
Chantilly is essentially just whipped cream. The name (pronounced "shantiyee" by the way, the double L is silent) comes from Chantilly castle in France, that's what frenchies call it. But it's just whipped cream.
I usually use a 'cheat' for the apricot glaze. Heat the whole jar of jam on the stove on low fire. When the jam is in a almost liquid form just pour it thu a sieve. No faffing with thick jam and a sieve. Let it rest and it will thicken up again. Store what you don't use back in the jampot in the fridge, eat the leftover big pieces with bread. Hope that this it is some use to you.
Great vid, as always! Btw, as a German I can tell you pronounced "Kirsch" just right. Even in Germany, pronounciations can differ a bit between "Keersh" and "Kursh". So no worries ;)
I was a line cook for 13 years. I can tell you’ve really grown as a cook. It’s funny watching someone realize that recipes don’t always have to be followed precisely. and then sometimes having to redo it because recipes have to be followed precisely.
It comes with experience. When you know what is happening with the food, and why you are doing certain things, it becomes easier to determine what can be changed or messed with.
I was also a cook for about 6 years, and cook most of my food at home, and incessantly watch cooking videos, so I have a good sense of what to do. A recipe like this can be altered quite a bit. Using different fruits, different creams, different breads or cakes, or different glazes.
Imagine a coconut cream meringue filling with a lime flavored cake and a mango glaze! 🤗
💕💕
@@lisaspikes4291 I can imagine it but think it would be ott.
@@lisaspikes4291 I volunteer as tribute anytime you need a quality control taster! 🙋🏻♀️
😆 the art AND the science of it.
This is why I always disagree when people make statements like "all human knowledge is available on the internet." Le Marly fell through the cracks until this video was made, even though at one time it was famous enough to make it into a celebrity chef's cookbook. Just imagine how many other cakes are out there in the analog world to be discovered! And I guess other things besides cakes...
There's a huge amount of research and knowledge of Home Economics that is not on the internet ... the whole field faded into obscurity in the 1980s. [Just about the time I became a stay at home mom, and wanted to research how to best maintain my household.]
I have both volumes, plus one of Julia's later TV series cookbooks. I've made many of her dishes (the simpler ones!) and everything was good.
That sounds like a really cool challenge! It should be Jamie's next series when he's finished with Julia haha
@@r.d.8172 What, forgotten cakes? I'd watch it.
I collect antique cook books for this reason. Really great info, especially in depression era cook books.
The only thing that hasn't changed and needs to is how underrated your channel is... Your baking skills?! HUGE turnaround. This has inspired me to do something that I love and just keep doing it - the growth will come. I can't wait to watch this!
Continue to be awesome
that means A LOT! :)
@@antichef I would have put a dollop of the whipped cream at the end of each piece and then centered a strawberry in each dollop (which I think is what Julia intended), but I LOVE the rustic look you created! Since you changed it, perhaps you could name it Le Marley de Provence, as that makes me think of the provinces or the more rural, rustic life, rather than the fancier life de Paris.
@@RLucas3000 nerd!
@@michaelwodz9807 nerds are awesome!
I wish you would do a halfblood prince version of Julia’s cookbook, where you scribble in the margins the corrections and things that worked for you cause that would be the perfect marriage of this fanciful, magical journey and reality that we could all cherish and use. I would for sure buy it.
Are there people in this world who do NOT scribble corrections in their cookbooks?
Well, I would have liked some chocolate drizzled over the top, but that’s me.
@@elizabethturel78that's me too! 😁
I would buy a jajulia hybrid cookbook
@@catherinewhite2943 Me. But then again, I use a Betty Crocker cookbook that I haven't really had any problems with so far.
Being able to make brioche by hand simply means you're an accomplished genius. That was art. Thank you for going through that so I could see it being done.
Adding a drizzle of dark chocolate across the top would be magnificent.
Or on the individual plate before putting the slice down.
A sprinkling of dark and/or white chocolate shavings
This is what I'm saying! 😆
Your take on brioche strawberry shortcake, with it's final and PERFECT simplicity of icing sugar instead of yet more whipped cream, is a recipe changer. Kudos to you, not-so-anti-chef! 👏
Brioche can feel like total chaos even when you're doing it exactly right! I'm really impressed! Let's just say I wouldn't put my first attempt out there on YT, it was not this successful. 😂
I don't think it's his first attempt but he seems to display an amazing attitude toward learning, and a humble confidence in the wisdom of more experienced people that his audience grows from.
Just got home from a VERY long RN shift and am currently sitting in the dark watching random You Tube videos to decompress. This video was exactly what I needed!!!! I laughed, empathized and now want to order a Julia Child’s cookbook! Thank You! Subscribed!
I realize I'm late to the game, but I am an RN also and I've been binging Jamie's videos, and I just ordered vol 1 and 2! Just had to share LOL
It's amazing to see the level of confidence Jamie has in the kitchen now compared to when he started. It's inspiring!
fisrt video i saw for him was his 1st attempt to make macarons. man, his progress is UNREAL
There is a grainy image of it in a McCall's Magazine from 1970 on Internet Archive. It was prepared by Julia and is served in a earthenware looking dish with only the domed top -- which is covered completely in piped cream and studded with strawberries -- exposed.
Beautifully done. Bravo! This is a riff of a tarte tropézienne, which is normally filled with crème diplomat or a crème mousseline. Brioche is normally classified as a viennoiserie/pastry and is generally made with a softer flour (T55/T45) for a cakier crumb. I have a hunch this version of the tarte may be inspired by a dessert Julia Child had at a café or bistro called Le Marly? Just a guess 🤷🏻♀️.
Just out of curiosity, I looked this up and there is a place in Paris called Le Cafe Marly :)
@@runswithbeer yes but that's part of the Louvre complex and opened in the 90s. I'm assuming Julia would have had it somewhere in the South because that's where the dish originates from.
Your Julia child's recipes have reminded me of great recipes my french grandparents used to make that nobody prepares anymore. I am definitely ordering Julia's child's books now.
I made the Le Marly and figured out what to do with the leftover bread. Roughly crumble it up and place it in two ramekins. Soak it with the leftover rum simple syrup and place in the refrigerator for a few hours. Cut up any leftover strawberries and whip up a small batch of Chantilly cream - combine with strawberries and spoon over the brioche right before serving. Grab a spoon and enjoy. Must admit it took me two days to make the Le Marly but it was well worth it. Love your videos - you are an inspiration to all us aspiring home cooks who want to up their game.
This was definitely a triumph...most definitely a triumph!!! I cook a lot, and am always taken with how you figure out the processes and things that are new to you...Bravo, my boy!! : ) This turned out spectacularly, I would say. Wish I could have enjoyed a slice with you! : )
ah so awesome to read that. Thank ya, Grant! 👊
Chantilly is a small city North of Paris. Theoretically it's whipped cream + (actual) vanilla + sugar. And it's pronounced chanti-yi. Hi from Paris btw, love your channel !
1:15 That reminds of Chef John's comment almost every time he makes a 24h recipe: if you want it today you have to start yesterday.
What I love about you is how messy and cavalier you are even with regard to the hardest techniques!!
I love how you throw your pots and pans and bowls around, and you slap the dough with such unbridled enthusiasm. This is how we non-professional cooks do it. Keep it up!
The combination of whipped cream and vanilla would take its name from a castle, the Castle of Chantilly, which inhabits the northern part of France and which gave, in the eighteenth century, the name to a village that rose right at its feet.
Your interpretation of thumping a loaf of bread is amazing.
🥺
Glad he doesn’t thump watermelons to see if they’re ripe that way lol
This is one of your most beautiful desserts yet! A+++ 🎖 I am 75% French, although American by birth, and this reminds me of the desserts my mother used to make. Your brioche was a dream and my mouth was literally watering watching you make this. C'est magnifique! ❤👨🎨👏👏👏
You nailed it! ….I was born in the U.S..but my family is French…we had this often. Brought back memories..you are a joy to watch. Keep rocking it!
Do you have any insight into the name?
@@adbreon I don’t….my grandmother would call it gateau aux fraises….basically strawberry cake….but it was the same thing.
Recently watching JC, you popped into the fray, and I must state that am enjoying you. I love how you throw yourself down onto the counter, snatch open the fridge, etc., which suggests your heavy-handedness, that you probably break things because of your ungentleness, which is cute to see, somewhat childlike. It also doesn't hurt that you're quite easy on the eyes. Keep up the good work. You're good at and made for this.
My gosh making that brioche dough is intense. I feel like anything could go wrong at anytime! Amazing job! This recipe looks delicious
Jamie, Well Done!! I made brioche two or three times a month for many years. I have the two Julia Childs books you are using, don't remember running across this recipe and am disappointed. This would have been repeated many times. To thump bread, use your middle finger, held back your thumb and flick your finger to thump the bread. Thanks for this video.😋
Love your channel. I like how you show that not everything is so easy & that having to check the recipe with sticky buttery hands is a normal ‘oh s**t’ regular occurance for us amateur bakers.
👍 subscribed.
Hell yeah! I remember I made this a while ago on my Insta and you gave me the thumbs-up. So happy you're covering it, it truly is magnificent!
Of course! You beat me to it! I can now understand it's magnificence!
Good job. I thought for sure you were overworking that brioche dough during the butter phase, but nope! A testament to your growing expertise. Congratulations. I especially liked your introducing your grumpier self, lol.
wow, you totally rocked it out on this one! your brioche looks superb! (yes, is a bit of a shame that all the middle gets scraped out to make the bowl, but i'm sure you found a good use for it, i.e. into your mouth immediately!). You are truly becoming a gourmet baker, and that ain't no lie! Bravo!
Just a suggestion, salt kills yeast really aggressively, so when activating your yeast, just give it milk and sugar to eat. Add the salt to the flour for the best rise. Love your channel. ❤️
Chantilly cream (pronounced as shawn- tee) is basically the same as whipped cream but generally with added sugar and/or a flavoring. It was invented in the French village of Chantilly specifically for the visit of King Louis XIV.
I was always taught that in making whipped cream, you start off with your beaters at slow speed then gradually increase the speed. With egg whites, you do the opposite by starting out at a high speed and gradually decrease the speed. That has always worked for me.
Shawn-tee-ee. I made the mistake of calling it Shawn-tee for ages and people just blanked.
@@joyb3545 Or rather shawn-tee-yee.
@@joannapebbleworthy9343 Joanna is correct, it is shawn-tee-yee.
Great stuff.
You look such a natural with pastry/dough nowadays though those who've watched the back catalogue know that it wasn't always so!
Amazing man, I grew up with these books in my house. My mother's obviously. I tried to make a few things from them, and mom always always made chantilly cream with strawberries. Its amazing. Thank you for bringing back my childhood in one fail swoop!
I couldn’t help but giggle right along with you when you assembled that beautiful dessert ! Nicely done!!
Props for making brioche by hand. I made it once using my Kitchen Aid and I thought incorporating the butter was going to kill my mixer
Jamie you nailed it! The whole episode was great. Your skills have improved so much. Why hasn’t Food Network snatched you up?
Jamie, I really enjoy watching you recreate Julia Childs recipes!! It's awesome 😊😊😊
Another great video! I love your content. All sugar is made from cane but some brands are less refined which is why they will have a tan or light brown tinge to it. In the sugar refining process, "raw" sugar is spun to remove the molasses which then makes white sugar. Brown sugar is made by spraying that molasses back onto white sugar and depending on how much, we get light or dark brown sugar. What people in the UK call castor sugar is simply white granulated sugar that is more finely processed to produce smaller crystals which is thought to be easier to incorporate into recipes. I've used both and they don't seem to make much of a difference to me.
Oh some countries mainly use sugar beet. A very sweet white beet. I don't know what's common where Jamie stays. But yes for the color. I use cane sugar (basically regular sugar to me) and it doesn't have a brown tinge.
wow...that was super interesting! Cheers, Lyle!
@@FutureCommentary1 Thanks for the correction. I should have mentioned I was refering mainly to sugar in the U.S and the brown tinge is a by product of pressed sugar cane. The full process has a few more steps, I gave the reader's digest version. 😃
Yes my mum used to just make “castor” sugar by putting normal granulated sugar in the blender…
White or granulated sugar in the US is equally likely to be made from sugar beets as it is from sugarcane. The molasses in brown sugar, however, is (to my knowledge) pretty much always from sugar cane.
This IS beautiful, and I am not a dessert eater but serve me up a piece cause it's goin down! Jamie, thanks for your entertaining and helpful videos!
This is so so good. Awesome. "Chantilly Cream" is Whipped Cream, usually sweetened, with the addition of Vanilla. 👏👏👏
I would say you nailed this one! One of my grandmothers made this many, many years ago.
Your content, quality, editing ability, cooking knowledge/ now learnt…. Is just brilliant and so easy to watch and learn from. You deserve your own tv programme… I hope that happens….
I love your happy giggle when you were assembling. Your joy is infectious
Ah, the good "Schladerer", it's from my home region in Germany and pretty famous for its spirits.
You're getting pretty darn good at this cooking stuff!
Chantilly is a small town
north of Paris
it might now be under the auspices of Paris now.
It has a chateau and in that chateau
they made sweetened whipped cream
hence its French name
Crème Chantilly.
It is just sweetened whipped cream.
AAAH! New subscriber here, so happy that I have this weird combo with your channel where I can correct you and simultaneously be impressed by you? You've grown so much as a baker and cook! And you share your mistakes, which I need to get better at.
Very admirable you're tackling Child. And your 'bowl me' cuts are flawless.
Jamie, me and my partner made this yesterday and it's one of the best desserts we've ever had! Loving the series
Wow! That’s a stunning dessert. Very impressive!
I remember watching her with my Nana after school & on the weekends I love baking because of her. You do her recipes justice some ppl try to make things their own & take credit or ruin the recipe; I love you don't. I love when ppl pay homage to the ppl who did the leg work & set the standards. New but already love your videos.
I love watching, it’s like I can’t walk away! Thanks for hanging in there all the way through!
Your pronunciation of Kirsch sounds really good in my opinion!
Jamie, this was so much fun! Le Marly looked gorgeous and apparently tasted incredible. 11 out o10! You are such a ball to watch. I love how humble you are about what you know and don't know . Thank you for making these excellent videos!
Really good work! Again, so proud of you for your tenacity. Re the thumping, pretty sure Julia meant to thump the bottom with your finger - not drop the bread repeatedly on your cutting board. ;)
haha! I'll go a little easy on the thumping next time
Your even temper is what keeps us interested. Good on ya man!
How can anyone watch this video and NOT give it a THUMBS UP?????
For all that work I'd probably bake both halves at once and freeze the second one. If I understood correctly about you halving the dough.... Looked aMAZing
Absolutely obsessed. I don’t cook but I might be inspired by your videos. Watching you cook is an absolute pleasure.
Just for future reference, since I've seen it happen twice now, adding salt to your yeast slurry is an anachronism and should never be done. Add the salt to the flour base mixture instead. Yeast and salt just really dislike each other. Another future tip is using a teaspoon, preferably a serrated "grapefruit" spoon, if you can find one, will make prepping those strawberries far less of a chore.
Yeast and salt has been tested time and time again. It really doesn't change much at all whether you add it to the yeast or the flour.
I second the grapefruit spoon as strawberry huller 🏆
I have seen numerous bakers test the yeast and salt controversy. All have found it to be a myth.
The sound of the brioche absorbing everything like a sponge, I felt it in my body.
This looks amazing! I am possibly wrong but I believe that the difference with regular whipped cream and Chantilly cream is that Chantilly is sweeter, has more sugar. Like I said I am not sure, other than that it looks great.
When he cut the dough in half, I actually gasped. It looked so pretty.
BEAUTIFUL dough! This looks fantastic. :)
This is a wonderful accomplishment. I have been watching you from day one you clever,clever man. Kudos to you! ❤️. I hope to try this one someday.
Dude I love baking but this really makes me wanna invest in a cookbook. You were on my recommended page and I was so shocked your videos don’t go viral more !!! Keep it uppp
Every stinkin’ time I watch one of your videos I want to run down to the kitchen and whip up that same recipe. The only problem is that I generally watch RUclips videos after getting ready to sleep and lying in bed! I guess that way it’s better on my waistline since I never leave the bed before drifting off to sleep without setting foot in the kitchen. This strawberry shortcake looks like an absolute MUST TRY next time strawberries are in season
I just wanted to say, I made this following your steps in this video and its the best damn thing I've ever baked. Thank you so much for documenting the experience, it really helped me put my hands to work with more confidence.
As a great british bake off lover, I finally know how to make all of the different doughs (brioche, puff pastry, savarin, genoise), sauces, glazes, and frostings they always reference thanks to your channel. Thanks for the great content.
The giggles of joy and pride that you exude every time something turns out well is genuinely so wholesome
LOL thump (tap) the bottom of the bread with your fingers to listen for the hollow sound, in case no one else has mentioned this! I love how you just threw it on the board to see if it's hollow, that made me laugh so much, thank you! I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!!!
Ironically, you said this dessert was nowhere to be found anywhere else... even though I have the same cookbook I can't remember even seeing it in there. I must go check again. It's outstanding all the same. Ps, I think the instruction to "thump" for doneness it is more of a tap of the finger on the bottom of the loaf rather than dropping the loaf.
Of all the recipes you've done on here, this is by far the one I wanna try the most!
Hi Jamie, I really enjoy your videos - and Julia’s food, books, everything. Crème chantillie is sweetened whipped cream whereas we in Europe usually makes whipped cream plain: no sugar, no vanilla. To me, it has a fresher and lighter taste than the standard North American super sweetened type.
"everything we know about it is on these few pages here" until now. that's the power of this series.
Oh hey I just realized my mom had this book. I remember the mustard crusted roast she made using a paste of dry mustard with bacon fat. Another unforgettable gem was the chicken livers in onions... I am not a liver loving woman but I ate that. It had enough cream in it for a Ukrainian wedding feast......oh no wait. That was MaDam Benoit. This looks e extremely similar....I wonder if they were published by the same company....squints at the cover...ps....when you thump bread you turn it upside down and tap the bottom with your finger. That's what mom did. Wow this looks so yummy.
Great video, the cake looked fabulous. To my knowledge, this cake is unknown in France, but is very close to what we call a "fraisier" nowadays, which is a very popular cake (very common for birthdays) that includes similar ingredients and composition, except for the alcohol, as desserts tend to contain less and less alcohol these days. I think that's why you couldn't find any reference to the cake online. Plus fraisier is a bit richer maybe, as the chantilly cream is usually mixed with a creme patissière (kind of thick custard). I'd really like to try that version someday.
Jaime, you are fun to watch. Makes me want to give French cooking a try. Thanks for the entertainment
Absolutely awesome, Jamie!!! The brioche came out perfect and so did the whole dessert. I want some now! You have brioche down, dude!!!
You're so fun to watch, thank you for cooking 💗
I made a peach version today. Haven't sealed it with apricot glaze, I hope I'm not sorry about that. It inspired me to look at Vol II. It's been on the shelf for years, but I only cook from Vol 1. I'll start looking.
You have totally inspired me to buy Julia’s books and explore the art of French cooking ❤️ so glad I found your channel
my jaw dropped open at how beautifully you executed this recipe. A+. you are sooo talented! wow.
So thanks for introducing me to this recipe . I’ve been ignoring volume 2. It really is delicious and the group I served it to thought so as well.
I don’t think I can have shortcake without brioche again. It just tastes bette.
Wow that turned out Magnificent!! And delicious!! Well done Jamie!!!
Nice way to start a Monday. Thanks, dude.
Fantastic episode. I am addicted to your channel.
Your video came on my homepage and now I'm hooked to your content!
Man that's one beautiful dessert! I'd love to try to make this. It's beautiful and looks delicious! Your cooking skills have really come so far. I've absolutely loved catching up to current videos of this series.
Chantilly is essentially just whipped cream. The name (pronounced "shantiyee" by the way, the double L is silent) comes from Chantilly castle in France, that's what frenchies call it. But it's just whipped cream.
Well, I am impressed. It is really beautiful. Congratulations... another one bites the dust.
You have definitely grown and your confidence is blooming.
I am so glad I found your channel. You are totally inspiring.
That looks incredibly delicious, well done! 🍓🍓🍓
Your bread baking skills are right on !!
Awsome job!I could almost taste that creation from here .thanks for the video
I usually use a 'cheat' for the apricot glaze. Heat the whole jar of jam on the stove on low fire. When the jam is in a almost liquid form just pour it thu a sieve. No faffing with thick jam and a sieve. Let it rest and it will thicken up again. Store what you don't use back in the jampot in the fridge, eat the leftover big pieces with bread. Hope that this it is some use to you.
sorry I see that the tip was already given and used in the Apple Charlotte.
You have huge Nick Miller Learns Cooking vibes and I am enjoying every second of it
I was so excited for you to try it! It looks amazing!!! Congratulations 🎉👏🎉👏
Great vid, as always! Btw, as a German I can tell you pronounced "Kirsch" just right. Even in Germany, pronounciations can differ a bit between "Keersh" and "Kursh". So no worries ;)
I read a strawberry top removal tip. Shove a straw up from the bottom to the top, removes top without removing too much of the strawberry.