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list price: $9.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Cooking
published: Oct 2011
ISBN:9781897109670
publisher: Signature Editions

Butter Cream

A Year in a Montreal Pastry School

by Denise Roig

tagged: personal memoirs, essays
Description

What happens when a 56-year-old fiction writer decides to ditch it all and attend professional pastry chef school for a year? In writing that brings to mind the work of journalist/chef Michael Ruhlman, Butter Cream: A Year in a Montreal Pastry School tells the story of eleven months of whipping, spreading and creaming in the pursuit of perfection. When Denise Roig set out to do this -- a lark, she thought -- she had no idea what it would cost and what it would give back.

Butter Cream is the chronicle of an intense year of learning and tasting, dramas at the stove and in the locker room. It's about fights, friendship and competition, fallen cakes and rising doughs. And sometimes, unexpectedly, it's about the sheer joy of baking. It's a memoir that also includes trips back to Roig's mother's and grandmother's kitchens and to her own complicated relationship with all things sweet.

About the Author

Denise Roig moved to Montreal from Los Angeles in 1989 when her twelve-year-old daughter, Ariel, convinced her they should run away so Ariel could join the circus. Her daughter went to study with Montreal's Cirque du Soleil and Denise spent the next twenty years as a Montrealer. Roig wrote professionally for twenty years before publishing her first short-story collection. She also taught magazine writing and editing at Concordia University and story-writing for more than a decade in Quebec high schools. She has published three collections of critically acclaimed short stories -- A Quiet Night and a Perfect End, Any Day Now, and Brilliant, as well as the delectable non-fiction memoir Butter Cream: A Year in a Montreal Pastry School. After three years freelance writing for The National newspaper in Abu Dhabi, Roig now makes her home in Hamilton, Ontario.

Editorial Review

Denise Roig's Butter Cream proved to be a very pleasant (dare I say 'tasty') surprise. When it first rose out of the package, I had my doubts, saying to myself, "I hate butter and I'm not all that crazy about cream, so this book starts off with two strikes against it." But this is a case of literally not judging a book by its cover. Or perhaps a case of making sure to read the fine print in the subtitle: "A Year in a Montreal Pastry School." In fact, by the time I got to fin 250 pages later, I realized I had undergone a thoroughly enjoyable (and educational) experience, not to mention a much greater appreciation of all those pastry-chefs-in-waiting who aspire to creating the crème caramel sans parallèle. Roig manages to combine the light and light-hearted in the world of intense pastry-schooling (and the fine art of baking) with a real grasp of the various human interactions involved in such an endeavour. These interactions reflect both those between teachers and students and among the students themselves. Roig's strengths lie in her ability to reveal human interaction in circumstances both rewarding and nerve-wracking. Not that this should come as a surprise: Roig is an established, veteran writer of both non-fiction and fiction, with several collections of short stories (A Quiet Night and a Perfect End and Any Day Now), and an experienced freelancer with more than 30 years in the field. Through the teacher-student connection, we witness the intensity of the actual learning program: how one goes about creating the various basic ingredients that go into the classic pastries and desserts. Through the connection we also get the intensity of the interpersonal clashes and bonds that the students have to sort out for themselves... A sense of fragility and the overcoming of deficits, both personal and social, threads its way through the book. So does the idea of growing, of fulfilling certain dreams, of being able to look in the mirror while congratulating oneself. Roig has the ability to pass these feelings on to the reader and to make all of us appreciate what goes into achievement, what it means to accomplish something, and the sacrifices that need to be made in order to do so.

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