Irish coffee, wine and a kitchen full of friends - behind the scenes of the perfect Christmas banquet

in Weekend Experienceslast year (edited)

gm frens!

I hope you had an amazing Christmas with your loved ones. I know I certainly did!

But let me tell you a little story about what happens behind the scenes of a perfect Christmas banquet.

Our neighbors and best friends, Ana and Pete host a Christmas lunch every year. They are both amazing human beings and they are both incredible in the kitchen, so we would definitely not miss this for the world. We all live downtown in downtown-sized apartments, so having anything more than a few friends over for dinner can be tricky. This year was a record with 22 souls invited to Christmas lunch. We knew this could mean trouble, so @pamarias and I showed up bright and early (9:00am) in sweat pants and t shirts to help them get things ready. We knocked on the door, and a frantic Ana answered in an apron. Pete was in the back trying to move the sofa, watch the oven AND getting Alexa to play some damn Chrismas Carols!

We said one line: We're here to help.

We were immediately let it and got to work, picking up all unnecessary furniture and decorations, sweeping the floors and stuffing everything in the guest room. Sofa, chairs, grill, plants... everything


Meanwhile, both Ana and Peter were in the kitchen. Ana was working on desert and peter had the oven going with a couple of surprises.

whew! "That was a lot of work", I said while I wiped the sweat from my forehead with my sleeve. maybe we should take a quick coffee break, yeah?

But why have regular coffee when you can have Irish coffee? 😄

yessir! it's Christmas and this sort of behavior is perfectly acceptable.

What are those things being baked in the background, you ask?

Those, my friend, are profiteroles or cream puffs. They are little choux pastry balls filled with whipped cream and glazed with caramel. The idea today is to make about 100 of these and assemble them into a type of pièce montée called croquembouches, which can be sometimes found at french weddings, baptisms and first communions.

Yep, Ana will be making this:


image source

No problem, right?

Well let me tell you. First of all, these little shits are fragile. As soon as they come out of the oven, you need to poke a little hole in the bottom when they're still warm. The hole will be used to squeeze in the whipped cream once they cool down. If you don't do it just right, you'll break it and will have to throw it out.

Lucky for me, I was on recycling duty, which means I get to eat all the broken ones 😌

The second and biggest challenge is the caramel glazing.
The process of caramelizing sugar is to heat the sugar very slowly to 340 °F until the molecules break down and turn into a brownish, sticky substance. You then find a way to dip the profiteroles in the boiling lava without burning yourself and let them cool so that they look like this:

glazed Profiteroles horizontal.jpeg

Then, if you somehow managed to get the caramel cooked perfectly and without giving yourself third degree burns, you need to make another pot of boiling caramel to stick them onto the tree:

Yeah, that wasn't going to be that easy. They caramel got burnt and crystalized more than a few times, and when they did get the timing and temperature right right, it hardened too fast to get all of the cream puffs glazed.

Poor Ana got several nasty burns on her fingers in the process

And we even had to bring in one of Latin America's top 50 chefs to try and help 😄
This is chef Diego Telles of Flor de Lis. He's just a guest for today's lunch and not supposed to be in the kitchen, But desperate times call for desperate measures.


Everybody needed to take a wine break to get our ideas straight.

Our friends popped open a bottle of 2018 Schramsberg Brut Rosé for the occasion. A delicious fruitful aroma of strawberry, watermelon, orange and peach. Plenty of bubbles to tickle one's throat too.

ahhhhh! now that's better.

Even the pups got a fancy cork to play with

There you go Compadre, chew on that

Ding! the duck is ready too!

wow! look at that!

Pete will be making Dodine de Canard aux pistaches. Which is stuffed duck with pistachios.

A small slice to see what our friend looks like on the inside.

and....

perfection 👌

Right after the duck, came the ribs. This is a crown of blackened pork ribs stuffed with thai sausage.

This is what it looked like before they put the stuffing in.

The dogs seem to be really enjoying the show (and smell) of all of this

The guests started arriving so we ditch the idea of the croquembouches and improvise a little bit. One of the chefs suggested a butterscotch and drizzle it on top of the profiteroles.
The guests won't know the difference or the challenges Ana and the kitchen had to go though to get to this 😄

It'll be our little secret.

Want to see what the stuffed duck looked like once it was done?

And look at those ribs! they added stuffing and everything:

In the end, the table and all its elements looked gorgeous and everybody was happy. We ate splendidly, listened to good music and had delicious french wine all afternoon. What more could someone ask for?

We are incredibly grateful to have friends like this in our lives, friends who compliment this very short existence on planet Earth and make the journey much more enjoyable.

I hope you also had a merry Christmas with your loved ones. May you have a happy new year too. If you're lucky enough to be on winter holiday for the rest of the year, I hope you have time to disconnect from your daily activities and really enjoy some family time, eat the food you like and listen to the music that makes you happy.

But most important of all: If you're invited to a delicious, photo perfect banquet, please don't forget to thank the cooks!

They might be hiding loads of oven burns, cuts, late nights and a whole lot of stress while you take that bite out of that perfectly baked profiteroles.

Happy Holidays!

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Friends indeed make our short existence on the planet more pleasant! Wow, having a chef preparing the food, the pup getting a new toy (the cork), and sharing that wonderful and tasty food, you had an excellent Xmas!
Happy holidays, @alex-rourke 😎

We absolutely did!!

It certainly woud say that having chef friends has its perks 😄

I've had an amazing long weekend and just now starting to get back online. I think I'll hop over to your blog to see what you've been up to 🙂

Me? Nothing really interesting in my blog... searching for a charger, walking with dear friends, listening to piano music... In real life, huh, una locura 😂

So, next weekend is again a funny one, the New Year's eve :))

The duck!! The ribs!!! Now that's a propper dinner if I've ever seen one!

I have some lamb ribs back home, going to put those on the coals once I get home from vacation.

I hope you guys had one amazing Christmas dinner and get together.. I would have... Dug in properly😎😎

A blessed new year to you and yours!!

!PIZZA
!LUV

Haha Irish coffe for breakfast and then all of this for lunch.

Best part was the company. These cats are amazing.

Did you get to eat lamb?

I bet the company was great! Cats probably more so..

We got the lamb butt yeahhhh😎 it was more than delicious thanks!..

Now an Irish coffee, that would do just fine!

Man, a lot of carbs there, but as a once-a-year experience I wouldn't say no...

😄 Yeah, I probably won't be losing weight this week hahaha

It's that time of year to drink more than usual and gain a few pounds. I don't mind doing it once a year either.

🍕 PIZZA !

I gifted $PIZZA slices here:
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Dear @alex-rourke,
Our current proposal (#199) will expire end of December. May we ask you to review and support the our proposal renewal (#248) so our team can continue its work next year?
You can support it on Peakd, Ecency,

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or using HiveSigner.
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Thank you!