Susie Norris

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SUGAR TALL AND HANDSOME

user image 2009-07-12
By: Susie Norris
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The sugar and chocolate showpiece competition at the World Pastry Championship is a place to pick favorites. I pick favorites there the way I might choose giant lollipops at the amusement park - which one speaks to my heart in color and design. But heres the trick that sets the sugar artists of the pastry championship miles apart from the guys in the candy kitchen making giant lollipops. Sugar artists must make their sculptures tall. Not just big, but gravity-defyingly tall. Next, they must make its colors so luminous and harmoniously blended that you recognize the object as something worthy of a museum or a sugar art gallery (if only there was one). Unlike bronze, stained glass or canvas where youd expect exquisite color and form meaningfully rendered together, sugar melts in heat and humidity. Sugar breaks. Sugar shatters. Sugar buckles under extreme weight. Creating a brilliantly colored and shaped sugar piece that is also tall and sturdy is the high-wire act these artists must perform. As if thats not enough, they have to do the same dazzling work in chocolate. What a show!For more photos of the sugar artists and their sculptures, visit www.pastrychampionship.com or order the next issue of Dessert Professional Magazine www.dessertprofessional.com

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Susie Norris
07/15/09 20:58:26 @susie-norris:
Thanks. How did the event go from your perspective?
Clay Gordon
07/15/09 17:14:37 @clay:
I am working on getting them.
Susie Norris
07/15/09 17:13:24 @susie-norris:
Dude, upload some pictures of CHOCOLATE showpieces!! I only have a few that are post-worthy but probably a little too blurry...can't wait for the official roll-out!!
Clay Gordon
07/15/09 17:02:57 @clay:
Hey - if you uploaded a picture of a CHOCOLATE showpiece I would have been talking about the techniques used in it. But you uploaded a picture of a SUGAR showpiece.
Clay Gordon
07/13/09 21:59:34 @clay:
Just a note on the globe in the above picture. The center of the globe is two hemispheres of pressed sugar. It's very difficult to glue sugar to pressed sugar, so each hemisphere of pressed sugar was "cast" in sugar and then joined to form the sphere. The sphere was then glued (using sugar) to the standing base piece and the other elements glued (again, using sugar) to the sphere.
Susie Norris
07/13/09 10:49:45 @susie-norris:
Thanks for the leads to more photos. The visuals of this event are really inspiring.
Clay Gordon
07/13/09 07:46:26 @clay:
BTW, the picture is of Chef Bill Foltz of Team Dadzie. They took the Bronze medal but did not win for their sugar showpiece - Team Salazar took the prize for best sugar showpiece.
Clay Gordon
07/13/09 07:44:11 @clay:
Susie:Thanks for this post.Actually, all of the photos I took (of the World Pastry Forum and the Championship) and all of the "official" photos are going to be posted on forums.worldpastryforum.com (it's a Ning site so you can sign up with your ChocolateLife username and password if you want to join).There are already two albums up - Chef Nicholas Lodge's Gum Paste Flowers Hands-on Class and Chef Bronwen Weber's Sculptured Cakes Hands-on Class. Next up are the Hands-On classes of Stephane Treand (chocolate showpieces) and Jean-Michel Perruchon (chocolate amenities).