Learn to Build Breathtaking Sugar Showpieces
Master Pastry Chef St茅phane Tr茅and, M.O.F Shows You How
In today鈥檚 highly visual world, pastry chefs can stand out with unique sugar sculptures. 鈥淚 notice that people remember me more for my airbrush than my cake,鈥 says Master Pastry Chef St茅phane Tr茅and, M.O.F. with a laugh. The recipient of the prestigious Meilleur Ouvrier de France, (M.O.F.), which means 鈥渂est craftsman in France,鈥 can鈥檛 wait to share his techniques with students who attend his workshop this September 23-25 at ICE.
Tr茅and believes that anyone can create their own work of art if they put in the time. 鈥淪ugar work is not only for chefs, says Tr茅and. 鈥淚t's for everybody. Hopefully I can fill up the class with artistic amateurs.鈥 Students will learn airbrushing, casting, pulled ribbon, pulled sugar flowers and much more.
Tr茅and advises beginners to use silicon molds, work with isomalt, wear plastic gloves and use lots of stencils when airbrushing. He鈥檚 also noticed a trend in the United States to build showpieces that can stand as tall as seven feet high, but he suggests that newcomers start slow with mini showpieces. And as with any craft, attitude is everything.
鈥淢y philosophy is never give up, share and always want to learn,鈥 says Tr茅and. 鈥淵ou have to be curious. You can always improve the way you鈥檙e doing pastry. Believe me, I鈥檓 still learning.鈥 Tr茅and discovered sugar showpieces in the 1970s when he saw another chef construct a Singer sewing machine made entirely of sugar. 鈥淚 was very impressed by how the cast iron was made of sugar,鈥 said Tr茅and. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥榃ow, how can you do that with sugar?鈥 I remember thinking that if I do something theatrical, like a showpiece, people will remember that, because it's visual.鈥
Since most showpieces in the mid-80s were replicas of existing objects, like the Eiffel Tower, Tr茅and focused on more abstract shapes to distinguish himself. Today, Tr茅and finds inspiration for designs everywhere. 鈥淒riving on the freeway sometimes you see a structure and say, 鈥榃ell, that's a nice bridge鈥 and of course the background we have in France is of beautiful churches or art from the last few centuries mixed with European art deco,鈥 says Tr茅and.
鈥淭here are many things that we mix. Some chefs even find inspiration in tribal tattoos.鈥 Tr茅and warns that sugar sculptures should not get 鈥渢oo weird鈥 though. 鈥淧eople like to recognize what it is,鈥 says Tr茅and. 鈥淵ou always need to be careful and do something that people can find themselves in.鈥
He鈥檚 practiced his own advice to great success. Tr茅and was named one of Dessert Professional鈥檚 Ten Best Pastry Chefs in America in 2007 and 2008. In 2009, he coached the bronze-winning USA team (which consisted of three of his former assistants) at the International Pastry Competition in Tokyo. Currently, he鈥檚 the executive chef consultant for Occitanial, a pastry shop in Tokyo, and he runs his own school in California, Art of Pastry Academy.
The greatest moment of Tr茅and鈥檚 career, however, remains the day he earned his M.O.F., the highest title anyone can get in an artisan manual trade in France. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 my first moment of pride in my whole life,鈥 says Tr茅and. 鈥滻 got it after three tries. My first final was in 1997. I failed. I failed again in 2000 and finally I got it in 2004. When you get it on the third time, it's even more important because you know the value of it. Finally you鈥檝e got it, and you know you鈥檝e got it forever.鈥
Tr茅and finds that his students feel their own sense of pride when they complete their first showpieces. 鈥淲hen they do something and realize, 鈥極h my goodness, I did that with my fingers and it's pretty nice,鈥 they feel proud,鈥 says Tr茅and. 鈥淭hey feel happy and that's all we need, just feeling happy.鈥 Tr茅and is grateful he discovered the artistic side of pastry because it gives him the chance to do something new every day. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 fun,鈥 says Tr茅and. 鈥淚t鈥檚 freedom. It鈥檚 creation.鈥
Space is limited 鈥 to register today for Chef Tr茅and's Sugar Showpieces workshop at ICE.
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