By Aiman Azri
But even for the rest of us, Le Cordon Bleu has much to offer, in the form of practical workshops (which are their part-time courses) on a vast variety of tempting topics, from preparing the perfect beef to baking the most festive Christmas log cake to learning the social etiquette of enjoying afternoon tea with French delicacies.
Whether you're a homemaker striving to improve your kitchen skills for your family, or a pastry enthusiast hoping to start a part-time business, or simply a food lover keen to deepen your knowledge and sample a slice of the institution that has trained everyone from Julia Child to David Burtka, these workshops will be a memorably valuable experience, filled with fun and flair.
Le Cordon Bleu Malaysia's workshops are consistently helmed by seasoned talents with respected reputations. Chef Thierry's nearly four decades of experience have taken him from his native France to five-star hotels throughout multiple countries, from South Korea to the Seychelles, Mauritius to the Maldives and Malaysia.
The workshops are patiently and professionally run, kept to a relatively small number of registered participants to ensure everyone receives sufficient care and attention. Eight of us gathered first in a demo room for a fuss-free preliminary briefing before being brought to Le Cordon Bleu's high-tech kitchen to craft four puff pastry creations.
The practical kitchen, where Le Cordon Bleu students undergo their formal training, is where most workshops are staged, stacked from end to end with industry equipment relevant for professional training that many of us had never used or even noticed elsewhere before. If you're fascinated by Kolb ovens, kitchen scales and Ice-o-matics, or relish getting your hands on whisks, spatulas and zesters, this kitchen is pure paradise.
From the start, chef Thierry proves a tremendous facilitator, relying on step-by-step commentary that even novices can follow. The workshops are tailored for participants of various skills sets - if this is your first time baking, everything will be explained clearly; whether or not the oven is your best friend, you're still guaranteed to learn something here.
Chef Thierry was aided by three assistant chefs, responsible for preparing the tools and ingredients for participants and helping out with any issues. With four chefs catering to eight participants, we constantly had personal access to experts who could answer our questions and offer reminders and recommendations on what we should be doing. Stewards on site immediately clean the used utensils.
Each part of the workshop began with a demonstration from chef Thierry himself, illustrating his techniques and describing why a procedure should be performed in a certain way. The chef also reveals what alternative produce can be utilised - not everyone has access to high-end ingredients, so chef Thierry informed us, for example, that while top-tier French butter is best, unsalted butter will still suffice - but never margarine, since that would not create the ideal 'detrempe' (puff pastry dough).
There's no pressure to perform here, though some participants took detailed notes, making sure not to miss a nugget of wisdom. Participants can feel free to ask anything, no matter how basic it might seem; chef Thierry kept technical terms to a minimum, so that everyone could understand him.
Workshop participants can learn more about how their favourite food is actually made. Our hands-on adventure launched with us preparing the detrempe with a spiral mixer, with the help of the assistant chefs who acquainted us with the machine's controls. Bakeries often rely on spiral mixers because its hook gently kneads a portion of the dough at each time, developing the gluten without overworking the dough and making it too tough.
We had fun shaping the dough, which had to be rested for 30 minutes before we folded it further, rested it again, and then folded and rested it a third time. Resting, chef Thierry explained, meant putting it in the chiller (found under our kitchen counters), to make it firm, while folding the dough gave it the suitable flakiness.
A participant asked what many of us were thinking, "Do we really need to rest the dough this much?" Chef Thierry informatively responded that if we skimped on the steps, we wouldn't get the desired flaky texture. You need to commit to the time, with no shortcuts.
Another lesson of the workshop is that it's OK to make mistakes - it even happened to chef Thierry. He showed us that even if we folded the dough imperfectly, the error could still be salvaged. He guided us with wit and humour, sometimes making the entire room burst into cheerful laughter.
No time was wasted in the workshop. While the dough was being rested, chef Thierry took us through the preparation for our pizza puff pastry, teaching us to efficiently slice tomatoes, to properly heat the stove, and to know how the tomato puree is ready, covering numerous useful tips for day-to-day cooking.
He told us to spice the puree to our preference, adding perhaps a pinch of curry powder for heat, cumin for an aromatic edge, or keep it simple with salt and pepper. "Agak-agak," he said in Bahasa, estimating how much spice would be needed - a sign that the Frenchman has adapted well to this country and understands how Malaysians cook.
Working on this helped us to better appreciate the meticulous, painstaking efforts by pastry chefs to produce the doughy delights that we take for granted. All in all, the process to create the pastry from scratch took five hours (though the time flew by, since we were constantly engaged by the process), before our dough was finally set to be moulded into puff pastry - well, almost.
First, we had to run it through the Rondo dough sheeter, which chef Thierry referred to as the laminator, helping to flatten the dough with clinical precision (in our case, exactly 2.5 centimetres thick). At home, we'd have to perform the task manually with a rolling pin, smashing the dough till it reached the sought-after evenness - totally possible, but most probably less exact.
Working with the Le Cordon Bleu kitchen's equipment is a breeze, with the expandable, multi-wheel dough divider, nicknamed the "bicycle," as one shining example. To cut our 31-by-24-centimetre dough into three even layers, we set the bicycle's wheels eight centimetres apart, rolling it forward to accomplish the task effortlessly. Chef Thierry noted we could use knives or a pizza cutter at home, but we'd have to be more careful with our measurements and the slicing for an even distribution.
Our labour of love!
The charming star of the workshop, chef Thierry, presented each of us a certificate of participation, as we exuberantly snapped photos of our food and our certificates to close the workshop. As an ambassador for Le Cordon Bleu Malaysia, chef Thierry succeeded in encouraging us to expand our horizons and explore a new culinary world that made us eager to return for more.
Celebrity chef Sapna Anand (photo courtesy of Le Cordon Bleu Malaysia)
Other workshops slated for this year range from preparing fresh pasta to southern French dishes like ratatouille, as well as French cakes and crepes. There'll even be acclaimed Malaysian chef Debbie Teoh for one workshop in October on recreating traditional Peranakan classics.
Click here for the full workshop schedule.
Thanks to Le Cordon Bleu Malaysia for this invitation and for the insights into a pastry chef's work. This is the first in our series of glimpses into Le Cordon Bleu Malaysia's many offerings; keep an eye out for much more in the months to come!
Le Cordon Bleu Malaysia
Sunway College, 5, Jalan Universiti, Sunway City, Bandar Sunway, 47500 Petaling Jaya, Selangor. Tel: 03-5632-1188
Website: https://www.cordonbleu.edu/malaysia/home/en
This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com