Got the last of this year's individual versions of Jean-Paul Hévin's Christmas cakes, Bûchette Venezia. This one will "make you think of coffee" and has "hidden tiramisu", so there is not much guess about the taste. This is about the right level of tiramisu for me and balances well with the chocolate. Of the three cakes, this was actually best as far is being more interesting a taste, although the flip side of that is I'm more interested in having the other two cakes again, for comparison to each other to get a feel for what's different. The sheets of chocolate on the outside aren't that great an idea, structurally. Even in the shop, they were falling off today and both had fallen off on mine by the time I got the cake unpacked home. Accidentally dropped one trying to put it back together, fortunately in a clean spot. On the other hand, I'm finally used to deal with them now: my strategy as pull them off the cake and quarter them and then lay one quarter on one slice of the rest of the cake.
For running, I took an easy run out to Ginza to see whether there was any possibility of doing a cake-off this weekend. I'm already resigned to skipping and doing none cake, since Christmas cake is where the profit is for the shops, so that's what they are focusing on. I already know that L'Abricotier is out for Saturday, Origines Cacao has individual cakes on Saturday at Isetan (visiting shop), but not the one I want, and their Ginza 6 shop has the one I want, but Thursday is the last day until after Christmas. F. Cassel is selling individual cakes, but not the cream puff that I want until after Christmas. My plan is to hit Yoyogi tomorrow evening and ask a couple shops there what they are up to.
I've been in Tokyo for a while and like to walk, hike, and now run around town. These days, my goal is cake, so I've visited numerous shops. I thought I'd track my running and introduce and review some shops and cake in Tokyo (or possibly beyond).
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