Showing posts with label orange peel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orange peel. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Le Chocolat de H/Paul Bassett, Chocolata

Tuesday, I mostly took a rest. I did some running, trying to pick off the clockwise run of the Jinguumae Northwest route, but I knew when I started that I didn't really know it. I just changed the route and need a turn at a particular alley along Takeshita Street, which is crowded and filled with similar shops: lots of crepe and lots of youth fashions. Now I remember that the convenience store marks where to turn to link up to the next loop and the turn after that is to continue on the Jinguumae Northwest route. For a snack, I stopped for the first time at The Deck Coffee&Pie. By pie, they mean in the sense of a fruit pastry pocket, though I actually got a slight variation in the form of the Chocolate Nuts Stick Pie, which is a chocolate and peanut pastry, so it's a little oily with peanut oil (it's hot pot). I'm not making it sound good, but it was. I wouldn't mind trying one of the fruit ones, though it's not a priority.

Wednesday, JPH finally updated their webpage, so I see that they have a longchamp cake that I haven't blogged yet, so I'll try to get that tomorrow, and the Tonka is back, so I'll tentatively plan for that as the cake-off entrant to go against Saint-Mark Praliné from Sadaharu Aoki, who've announced pistachio ice cream for Tokyo Midtown and Shibuya Hikarie ShinQs, but not what the new exclusives will be at the other locations. Related to the latter, today's run was down to Hikarie ShinQs, but not for ice cream. I wanted to visit the Le Chocolat de H/Paul Bassett café. This time, I got the Chocolata, which features orange peal and walnut. Not sure where the walnut is, since it's not obviously nutty, but I would guess that the biscuit uses walnut flour. My first thought was that it was not that exciting, since I usually like a heavier cake or light in sense of mousse, whereas this cake is very much a café style cake, being a like a torte, with just ganache between layers of biscuit. The biscuit is very light and thick, but it's not short-cake like sponge, but neither is it one of the tougher cakes. As I ate it thought, "good" did not seem sufficient; even if I usually go for something more decadent, I can enjoy this and it's a nice change and among such cakes, this might be what I would choose, which is sort of my definition of excellent: if I could make it, it would be worth making. So that's too excellent chocolate cakes (my bias). They have third, a raspberry as the seasonal cake, I think, so should go for that before it disappears.

For running, I finished off verifying my memory of the trivial Shibuya central loop, and the similarly tiny Shibuya west loop, though I did expand it slight, so it now reaches the northeast corner of the famous Shibuya scramble intersection. I've also noticed that I've never gone and looped at what's in the Seibu basement food area, which is the northwest corner. They might not have any cake, but they have counters of a few brands I like, so I should check. They have a Factory Shin, which I know from Tokyo as good or quite good, but that doesn't mean they have cake there (it's not like they're going to import fresh cake from Kobe). On big loops, I failed on the Shibuya north loop counterclockwise, but I can get that when I do the west loop again. I did get the Jinguumae northwest loop, which was my priority, as far as being the closest in not confirmed. Tomorrow I should work on the east area around Gaien.

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Clover [Isetan] and 9.9 km

Got cake from (P.) Clover, at Isetan and did a run down to Aux Bacchanales in Akasaka, which closes really early (before I got there), although I was just trying to confirm their existence. I thought at least the café was supposed to be open, but apparently not. There were still staff, so they were open sometime today, I assume.

The run was a moderately paced 4.9 km in 29'35'' there and a slow 5.0 km in 31'48'' coming back.

The cake was the standard chocolate mousse type that attracts me and usually disappoints me (because I'm tired of chocolate mousse), but this was good. I think it was Chocolat Noel, but I'll have to check back at Isetan, which I don't always remember to do. It was definitely 509 yen and is a small seasonal cake, so it's not posted on their regular website (they have a large seasonal chocolate cake by this name, but it has strawberries). The cream layer inside was earl grey flavor, and there was a layer with orange peel, giving a good balance of flavors. It was not great, but it is a kind of cake that I'd like to enjoy, so I'm happy with it being definitely good and marking this place as "Worthy" on the map, although it clearly is serving the lower end of the Isetan basement market (other evidence is that they also sell at other department stories in the Shinjuku Station area, although that doesn't necessarily mean cake) and was not busy (unlike Sadaharu Aoki, which is doing a brisk Valentines Day business). Also in favor of this place, when I asked what was in the cake, not only could they immediately tell me, but they pulled out a schematic cross-section of the cake showing what the parts were. I'll go back just for more of that.