2019-07-01_Bake_from_Scratch

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

july | august 2019 74


BIRTHDAY CAKE
Cake never really did it for Christina. She thought it was just OK, a
world of missed opportunities. When Christina opened the fi rst Milk
Bar in 2008, she knew it was time to create an amped-up cake that
always delivers. Her formula required that every element of the cake
must be delicious on its own so when the various elements (layers,
frosting, garnish) stack up in the fi nal product, it’s a symphony of
bold fl avor and stimulating texture. Lastly, no frosting on the sides
of the cake. Why would you want to cover all that ingenuity with a
thick coat of frosting? Christina wanted to let people in. It took her
and the Milk Bar team three years to create the perfect Birthday
Cake. The result? Three confetti sprinkle-studded vanilla- and
milk-soaked layers stacked up between heaps of made-from-scratch
frosting (inspired by the boxed supermarket stuff you grew up with)
and topped with Birthday Cake crumbs. •

MILK BAR PIE


When she was just beginning her career, Christina worked at the


restaurant wd~50. Every Sunday, the kitchen staff came together


at the restaurant early for a potluck-style family meal. Christina


wanted to make a pie but didn’t have the ingredients to do so.


She was reading about pies from different regions and discovered


chess pie. Popular in the South, the recipe is perfect for when you


don’t have much left in the pantry. Christina loved the idea of it


and started baking, not really measuring. She made an oat cookie


crust and ground up freeze-dried corn to powder to add to the


fi lling. It never quite set while baking, but it smelled incredible.


She pulled it out of the oven and threw it in the freezer in hopes


that the fi lling would get thick enough for her to serve. That


night, she heard noises coming from the kitchen as everyone


took bites. People went crazy for the pie.


CEREAL MILK ICE CREAM


Christina was running the pastry program at David Chang’s


Momofuku restaurants and needed an easy dessert to put on the


menu. Panna cotta seemed like the best option, but she wanted to


create an upgraded panna cotta with a point of view. Christina,


who is obsessed with cereal, wanted the panna cotta to taste


like the milk at the bottom of a bowl of cornfl akes. She steeped


toasted cornfl akes in milk and poured it through a strainer to


create the magical ingredient. The dessert became such a hit at


Momofuku restaurants that when Christina was opening Milk


Bar, David suggested she make it into an ice cream. She whipped


up a Dairy Queen-style soft serve with milk, cornfl akes, brown


sugar, and salt. It was one of the fi rst items she put on the menu


at Milk Bar.

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