molded-foods-msg - 8/20/07 Period and modern molded foods. Molds. NOTE: See also the files: sotelties-msg, aspic-msg, illusion-fds-msg, Warners-art, candy-msg, sugar-msg, cookies-msg, mamouls-msg, marzipan-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ Date: Tue, 16 Sep 1997 16:58:03 -0500 (CDT) From: alysk at ix.netcom.com (Elise Fleming ) Subject: SC - Re: Julleran's Sugar/Candy Glass Julleran wrote: >Would candy molds that you can buy at art stores work, or are they >just for chocolates which I imagine would have lower temperatures than >melted sugar? If you buy the same kind I do, no, they won't work. Plastic molds will melt with the high temperature or at a minimum will warp. The rubber ones probably won't work either because of the high temperature. Master Dyfan ab Iago from AEthelmearc made a large sugar swan from melted sugar and used one of the "ice" molds that one freezes water in. I'm assuming it is metal - Never saw it, but I do have a photo of it. Alys Katharine Date: Wed, 17 Sep 1997 18:13:35 -0500 From: L Herr-Gelatt and J R Gelatt Subject: SC - Re: sca-cooks V1 #277 > If you buy the same kind I do, no, they won't work. Plastic molds will > melt with the high temperature or at a minimum will warp. The rubber > ones probably won't work either because of the high temperature. > > Master Dyfan ab Iago from AEthelmearc made a large sugar swan from > melted sugar and used one of the "ice" molds that one freezes water in. > I'm assuming it is metal - Never saw it, but I do have a photo of it. > >I thought he used a rubber mold, which was thrown away afterwards. I am not >sure.... I wasn't paying that much attention at that feast. (I think it was >the same feast with the hart that bled red wine: a period soteltie). Nope. It was a rubber ice sculpture mold that he DIDN'T throw away. He was going to re-use it for the same purpose recently until horrible bout with Carpul Tunnel Syndrome scotched the idea (did someone say Scotch?). It seems the sugar is poured in, and the mold must be held at various angles while the sugar cools enough to stay in it's area. Then more sugar is poured in, etc..... The swan is hollow in the end, and we had plans for a procession of them, lighted from inside with candles, necks decorated with marzipan rose wreaths. Sigh. It would have been wonderful. Aoife. Date: Sun, 12 Oct 1997 17:02:39 -0500 From: L Herr-Gelatt and J R Gelatt Subject: SC - Re: Illusion food >You already probably know of "apples" made from meatballs; hollow >walnuts made of sugar paste with trinkets inside; and the >above-mentioned bacon and hard-boiled eggs of marzipan or sugar paste. >Can we invent something similar? > >Alys Katharine I've also been known to mold butter into another form, harden, unmold, and press fresh herbs, edible flowers, and thinly sliced pieces of vegetables cut to fancy shapes onto the surface of the butter. You wrap it up, chill it again, and simply unwrap to serve. Letting it stand a while will make it soft enough spread. Just a few ideas off the top of my head. Aoife Date: Wed, 10 Nov 1999 07:45:49 PST From: "Erika Thomenius" Subject: SC - medieval cookie molds I apologize if this has been posted before, but I found a site that deals in historical cookie molds. It's www.houseonthehill.net. They have some medieval and renaissance marzipan molds, as well as some cookie molds that appear to be copies of carvings done in other media. (if you go, don't miss the oddities section.) Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2000 13:31:56 -0400 From: "Hupman, Laurie" Subject: RE: SC - molds >>>Oh! I hadn't thought about it until Niccolo said this but liquid latex would work. People wear latex gloves when they're doing food prep, right?? I have a friend who's in the circus and she uses it to make her noses. I wonder where you could get such a thing...... If nothing else feasible pops up let me know and I will call her and see if she can find out where they get theirs. Mercedes<<< Well, now that you've mentioned it, dental alginate would be just about perfect. It sets really quickly to a sort of hard rubber consistency and you don't have to worry about it not being food safe. Mix up a bit, press your peach pit into it to make a mold, et voila! I actually have a bunch at home, and I'd be more than willing to part with a bit, or you can order it online from Monster Makers (www.monstermakers.com, I think -- my net connection is down at the moment). Rose :) Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2000 10:19:36 -0400 From: "Hupman, Laurie" Subject: RE: SC - molds Dental alginate takes such a good impression that when I used it to make commedia masks last summer, the mold showed the pores from the actors' faces. If you pour it into a mold, you will get an *extremely* detailed piece. If you take a casting from it, you'll need to support it somehow, since it is very wet, even when set, and prone to tearing. For the peach pit, I would think pouring some alginate into a cup and then pressing the pit into it would give a most swell mold. The alginate mold, however, won't last more than a day or so, since as it continues to dry overnight, it also shrinks a lot. Rose :) From: "Elise Fleming" To: Date: Wed, 27 Jun 2001 08:50:00 -0500 Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: Early Pastries I commented and Stefan quoted and wrote: >Alys Katharine commented: >> The Manuscrito Anonimo from the 13th c. lists >> a castle (and its furnishings) made of poured sugar. >In the *13th* century? Just how big was this castle. And who was >it made for (ie: who paid for it) and where was it made? >My understanding is that sugar was pretty expensive in that time >period. That must have been one real expensive trinket. This is from Charles Perry's translation, and appears on p. A-71 of Cariadoc's _Collection of Medieval and Renaissance Cookbooks_, Vol II, Sixth Edition, 1993. The cookery book is _An Anonymous Andalusian Cookbook of the 13th Century_ "Cast Figures of Sugar" "Throw on the sugar a like amount of water and rosewater and cook until its consistencey is good. Empty it into the mould and make of it whatever shape is in the mold, the places of the 'eyebrow' and the 'eye' and what resembles the dish you want, because it comes out of the mould in the best way. Then decorate it with gilding and whatever you want of it. If you want to make a tree or a figure of a castle, cut it piece by piece. Then decorate it section by section and stick it together with mastic until you complete the figure you want, if God wills." As far as expense of sugar, yes, sugar could be expensive, but keep in mind that Spain was occupied by the Moors, and it was in the Arabic world that sugar refining began. It might not have been the expense that it would have been in France or England. The shipping would be "just" across the Mediterranean, not overland through Europe. As to size... I may be old, but I'm not _quite_ that old to have seen a construction in the 13th century. I suspect it might have varied in size, but if they are talking about rooms, and furnishings, then it wouldn't have been tiny. Alys Katharine Perry noted that "eyebrow" and "eye" might be technical terms for parts of the mould. From: "Stephanie Howe" To: Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] peach pit molds, period utensils Date: Thu, 6 Sep 2001 11:13:48 -0500 My molds are unglazed- marzipan *loves* to stick to non-porous surfaces like glue... spoons, counters, tile wall, eyeglasses...:) Try rolling your marzipan in sugar before pressing. Olga From: "Olwen the Odd" To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] peach pit molds, period utensils Date: Thu, 06 Sep 2001 18:01:16 +0000 >My molds are unglazed- marzipan *loves* to stick to non-porous surfaces like >glue... spoons, counters, tile wall, eyeglasses...:) Try rolling your >marzipan in sugar before pressing. > >Olga My sculpy molds aren't sticky. The first one or two in are the only ones that are a little more stubborn. After that the almond oils cover the thing and they all slide right out. Maybe you might try "priming" the molds each side seperate. Olwen Date: Wed, 26 Sep 2001 21:10:51 -0400 From: johnna holloway To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Regrets about foods.... OOP Gretchen M Beck wrote: > On topic, to change things slightly, ever made something that you > thought looked and smelled and (if you could bring yourself to taste it) > tasted vile, but everyone else seemed to love? > toodles, margaret I entered a contest once upon a time ago. It was "Best Representation of a Shamrock in Any Medium." I made an authentic Irish carrageen (seaweed) moss boiled milk mold in the shape of a shamrock. It was this ghastly green color and it tasted "awful" to say the least. I won the contest with a really good currant shortcake cookie, but the mold was unbelievable. It was authenticly awful. Johnnae llyn Lewis Johnna Holloway Date: Wed, 17 Oct 2001 22:10:13 -0400 From: johnna holloway To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Marzipan creations, & experiments Jennifer's comments about molds reminded me that Beryl's Cake Decorating and Pastry Supplies catalogue was advertising a product called CREATE-A-MOLD. It's a reuseable non-toxic molding gel that can be melted in the microwave. See it at: http://beryls.safeshopper.com/130/4850.htm?452 or at http://www.beryls.com/mainpage.htm. It's priced at $15 for 8.5 ounces. Has anyone tried this??? She also sells silicone plastique for molding. Johnnae llyn Lewis Johnna Holloway Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 16:41:24 -0500 From: johnna holloway To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: [Sca-cooks]Sotelties was OT Rudolph an icon??? "Mark.S Harris" wrote: > Speaking of icons, Icons are small portraits/paintings done in > the Orthadox Church (see Icons-art, icons-msg in the RELIGION > section of the Florilegium). I wonder if you could do one in > sugarpaste/marzipan using food colors to make a soteltie? Any > evidence of this having been done in Byzantium? I doubt sotelties > were strictly a western European thing. > Stefan li Rous Peter Brears' All the King's Cooks, 1999, has a color photo of a moulded Marchpane. It is a large dinner plate sized marchpane that has been unmoulded and then colored. It was made using a reproduction wooden mold based upon an illustration printed in 1827 of an early 16th original. He has a full description with instructions. He also has a great deal of information regarding sotelties and sugarpaste works in general. As for Byzantium, we may learn more about the foods and cookery of that era when Andrew Dalby, THE FLAVOURS OF BYZANTIUM, ISBN 1-903018-14-5. comes out from Prospect Books in England. There are also several modern cake decorating books that show one how to use food colors on flat sheets of gumpaste to make flat artworks that can then be placed on cakes. I have also seen a cake decorated with painted "gumpaste" minatures of paintings that were placed on easles on the cake for decoration. Johnnae llyn Lewis Johnna Holloway From: "Robin Carroll-Mann" To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2001 22:00:27 -0500 Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Jello was Tofurky Report On 27 Nov 2001, at 9:07, Tara Sersen Boroson wrote: > Or perhaps... marzipan fishies suspended in blue jello? Or marzipan > birds in blue jello with whipped cream. Or little marzipan devils in > red jello... or a marzipan santa head on top of a jello santa belly! > :) > -Magdalena Sounds very similar to a recipe in the Neapolitan cookbook. Whole fish "swimming" in a basket full of gelatin. Brighid ni Chiarain *** mka Robin Carroll-Mann Barony of Settmour Swamp, East Kingdom From: Christina Nevin To: "SCA-Cooks (E-mail)" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Jello was Tofurky Report Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2001 10:44:11 -0000 > Or perhaps... marzipan fishies suspended in blue jello? Or marzipan > birds in blue jello with whipped cream. Or little marzipan devils in > red jello... or a marzipan santa head on top of a jello santa belly! > :) > -Magdalena For a long-ago feast subtlelty I made a pond from jelly, with chive 'reeds', fish carved from carrots and marzipan lilypads and frogs. It was in a glass bowl so you could see the fish and the 'bottom' of the pond. It looked very cool - and naturally, no-one got a photo of it! Lucrezia Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2003 10:41:19 -0400 From: johnna holloway Subject: [Sca-cooks] Information on silicone molds for foods To: "mk-cooks at midrealm.org" , "sca-cook at ansteorra.org" The September 2003 issue of Pastry Art & Design contains an article on the use of molds in pastry cirles. Michael Joy's work is described. He taught a class on molds at the World Pastry Forum in July. People might be interested in his website and book at: http://www.chicagomoldschool.com/book/book.htm The book goes into how "Silicone molds can be used fr casting chocolate, aspic, tallow, fondant, pastillage, salt, pepper, hot sugar, granulated sugar and ice. Starting with basic mold making skills and progressing up through advanced techniques, this book reveals how to make food grade and cost-effective on-food grade silicone molds." The gallery section has a number of neat photo's of creations from his studio. One of the interesting links is to a supply source called-- www.chefrubber.com where one can get silicone and supplies for pastry chefs. www.cherubber.com no kidding. Given what the basic materials cost the book might be worth looking at for those wanting to experiment in this area. Johnnae llyn Lewis Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2004 21:36:44 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Marzipan question To: Cooks within the SCA Robin Carroll-Mann wrote: > On 10 Mar 2004, at 13:37, Johnna Holloway wrote: >> You might check out butter molds. I used a rubber one snipped > I'll look for some -- that would be less work than the rigid candy > molds. I went and dug mine out from the box where they are stored--- The original box says 1981, so they are still in great shape after all these years. Found these on web--- http://fantes.com/butter.htm Johnnae Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2005 22:32:33 -0500 From: kattratt Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Poured sugar To: Cooks within the SCA wildecelery at aol.com wrote: > So... getting into my sugar project, which of course needs to be done > for NL this weekend... I was thinking of possible adding poured sugar > to my repetiore of flavored sugar creations.... (I just read Stefan's > post) What kind of molds do i need for poured sugar? Any ideas on > places a decent mold substitute can be picked up quickly? > > -Ardenia I have actually made some pretty darned accurate molds using aluminum foil. (Just fold it until it looked like the shape I was recreating in the first case or Creating in the other case.) However I will warn you about this method!!!! Use a generous amount of Pam or oil. (If you don't the poured sugar is damn near impossible to get off the foil or vice versa) Other places to get molds... Oh Wow I just thought of the coolest thing.....hehehehehe must look for a Metal, Lamb Cake form. Antiques stores are good places (duh), Flea Markets or Yard Sales. Regardless I would recommend metal molds!!!! Having been burned by the Molten Lava that is Poured sugar... believe me when I say that you want a mold that will withstand high heat. Nichola Date: Sun, 22 May 2005 14:00:57 EDT From: Devra at aol.com Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: Cake molds To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org I just got an email from Williams Sonoma about a 'sandcastle' bundt cake mold. It looks pretty cute, and might do well for a subtlety, with a little fussing and decoration. Devra Devra Langsam www.poisonpenpress.com Date: Sat, 8 Oct 2005 10:07:47 +0200 From: Volker Bach Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Re: Sca-cooks Digest, Vol 29, Issue 3 To: Cooks within the SCA Am Samstag, 8. Oktober 2005 04:38 schrieb Kathleen Madsen: > We have not found butter molds from period, but that > doesn't mean they didn't use them. Wood does > decompose, and most of the molds from more modern > times (1800's) have not survived because they saw > heavy use. The wood was not oiled, and they were > soaked in ice or very cold water prior to being > filled. This allowed the butter to set up quicker and > tip out of the mold more cleanly. > > I have several antique molds that I don't use, but you > can purchase new ones online from suppliers like > http://www.lehmans.com/ Hey, these are exactly the ones I got! Except I didn't pay $23.95 apiece. Talk about overpriced. Thanks for the directions, though. I'll try the ice water trick. I used the small one for stamping marzipans Thursday and it works very well. Something to remember for next feast. Giano Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2007 09:07:23 -0800 (PST) From: charding at nwlink.com Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Making Silicone Molds? To: alysk at ix.netcom.com, "Cooks within the SCA" > Greetings! Has anyone worked with "silicone plastique" to make molds? I > purchased some of this from Sweet Celebrations and the directions say > "Sulfur ruins Silicone Plastique. Latex gloves contain sulfur. Do not use > latex gloves when working with silcone plastique." So... are gloves really > necessary? Can't you use your hands without gloves? What about using a > metal spoon to mix? Any hints would be helpful! > > Alys Katharine you could try nitrile gloves. I don't know about the sulfer issue with them..... Maeva Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2007 12:17:34 -0500 From: Gretchen Beck Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Making Silicone Molds? To: alysk at ix.netcom.com, Cooks within the SCA , sca-cooks at ansteorra.org, SCA Subtleties E-List Found this website -- it shows someone working with silicon plastique without gloves -- it shows them just mixing with their hands: http://www.culinart.net/silicone.html toodles, margaret Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2007 13:16:58 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Making Silicone Molds? To: Cooks within the SCA Elise Fleming wrote: > Greetings! Has anyone worked with "silicone plastique" to make molds? This is an abbreviated version of what I posted to the Subtleties list earlier today.. OK I purchased a couple of types of these from Beryl's in Virginia a few years back. I bought a trial kit of Silicone Plastique and then a jar labeled Create A Mold which comes from Australia. Both were new items at the time. I used the Create a Mold to try and create a peacock but the item floated to the surface and didn't work. It was going to require a great deal of work to get the item to work for what were essentially small accent pieces. So that jar was recapped for further work later. One remelts this stuff and can reuse it. http://beryls.safeshopper.com/130/4850.htm?452 I would add that price has gone up considerably over what I paid. I read through all the instruction on the Silicone Plastique and decided at that time that I needed more time and space to work with it. So that got repacked. I just read through my instructions for that again and it refers to mixing it by hand, so I would just use my hands. Nothing is said about latex gloves or sulfur. There are full color instructions given in International School of Sugarcraft: New Skills and Techniques (International School of Sugarcrafts), Vol. 3.and it also appears in Sugar Roses for Cakes by Tombi Peck on pages 34-35. These might not be the same formula. I just checked on the web and there are a number of these being sold now. http://www.culinart.net/silicone.html My thought about these is that they'd work probably pretty well for special small molds for a really special dinner, like HerRM likes a beast for which one can't find a special ready made mold. Then you could use this stuff and create your own special mold (after a number of hours and probably a number of failures.) Then you create the hundreds of needed sugarpaste, chocolate, or marzipan beasts. Fun to play with but maybe limited in what one create. Michael Joy sells the professional stuff. Expensive, but these are what the pros use in those competitions. http://www.chicagomoldschool.com/ See make your own mold here http://www.chicagomoldschool.com/Tips&Tools/MoldMaking/moldMaking.html The book is very impressive and answered a number of my questions. Johnnae Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2007 08:28:04 -0400 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Molded butter creatures was Hi all! To: Cooks within the SCA Sounds cool. There are some pictures of elaborate butter sculptures in some of the professional banquet books. There's an actual description of molded butter figures from just past 1600. /Le Ouverture de Cuisine/ from 1604 ends with the description of butter sculptures created for a banquet. "There were four parks of two feet square, environed in a hedge of butter. The first was Adam & Eve made of butter, a serpent on a tree, & a running fountain, with little animals all around of butter. The second park was the love of Pyramus & Thisbee, the lion by the fountain, & the trees all around environed in a hedge of butter. The third park the hunt of Acteon, & the nymphs with Diana at the fountain, & then of the little dogs of butter. The fourth park was two wild men, who battled one another with the masses by a fountain, & little lions of butter all around: each park had four banners. **Translation at: http://www.medievalcookery.com/notes/ouverture.shtm This is listed as being from THE BANQUET OF THE ENTRANCE of Monsieur Robert de Berges Count of Walhain, Esquire & Prince of Liege, made in the palace in Liege, the year 1557 in the month of December. Johnnae Elaine Koogler wrote: > Sounds cool. Did I ever tell you about the molded butter dragon I saw in > Hong Kong years ago? It was 4 feet or more tall and more than 6 feet long! > It was at a wonderful French restaurant on the top of Victoria Peak. What > they had done was to use rods with refrigerant in them as the armature of > the beast...it was a truly amazing work! > > Kiri Edited by Mark S. Harris molded-foods-msg Page 11 of 11