• About Chuletz

Little Chulet's World

~ Little CHuLeT goes to market, Little ChULet comes back home, Little cHulet goes online, all set to whine!

Little Chulet's World

Monthly Archives: December 2011

Columns, Beams, Pipes !!!

20 Tuesday Dec 2011

Posted by chuletz in Home, Renovation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

columns, house, Renovation

The hacking begins and so has my nightmare.

Even after checking up and down. Looking at the house original print and also asking the developer. We still ended up with a HUGE column where we least expected it. sighhh….

We had expected that there would be one column on this wall and it was the column 1. However, to our SURPRISE, there’s a column numero 2 !!! AND look at the SIZE of this column… sigh. ALL the previous pain-staking design, calculation and layout is throw to the bin. It’s back to square one again.

A word of advice for future house owner. If you are planning on doing alot of extension, it might be better to get your contractor to punch a whole thru the wall on specific places to acertain before you do your layout. 

Sob. sob. sob.

 

Pumpkin – our first cat

16 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by chuletz in Everything else...

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cat

Doesn’t he look like puss-in-boot? hehehe…

Our first cat. Before this, we only had dogs. Pumpkin was a huge thing weighting at about 9-10kg. Our vet used to call him Garfield. heheh… Pumpkin got along really well with our 2 dogs, Mary and Jess. (epsecially Mary). They always play together and sleep together. When Mary pass away of old age, we can see that pumpkin was really depress. This little fellow would lie down on the mat which Mary use to lie down. One month later, he pass away too.

Sob sob…sob. My little sister was hardest hit as she love pumpkin to pieces. I miss you pumpkin. Rest in peace in kitty heaven.

Macarons

15 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by chuletz in France, Gastronomy, Oversea Restaurants, Travel

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

France, Ladurée, Macarons, Pierre Hermé

When macarons are mentioned, most of us would immediately think about a layer of ganache fillings sandwich between 2 almond meringues. This was not how macarons used to be. Today’s perception of macarons are actually influenced by Ladurée (pastry shop in France since 1862). Ladurée remains as one of the most established macarons makers and is recognize internationally. You should see the amount of tourist lining up to buy them !!!  

During one of my trip to Paris, I saw that the line in front of Ladurée was short and quickly took the decision to queue up for these scrumptious babies… it took about 30 minutes before I got to my turn (YES – even short queue takes 30mins). After selecting some of their popular flavors, I ran out of the shop gleefully and took my first bite. It was a disappointing experience for me. Perhaps it was my first time trying macarons and I had really high expectation or not knowing what to expect. It was extremely sweet to the point that I felt like I got sugar shocked or something. The following bites were with less enthusiasm.  So, that was the last time I bother with macarons. I think that was about 4 – 5 years back. 

This year, a good friend (Ms. J) asks if I could bring back some Ladurée for her to try. So, I told her I’ll try to make my best effort to make time (business trip = no time for shopping). Unfortunately, I didn’t manage to find the time.

But, when I come across Pierre Hermé’s shop and no queue, I ran in to buy 14 pieces. I know it was not what she wanted, but, I thought better than none. And, I did hear a lot of this chef, especially from some of my clients.

In the world of macarons, Pierre Hermé needs no further introduction. He was the youngest to be ever named theFrance’s Pastry Chef of the year and also the ONLY pastry chef to be awarded ‘Ordre des Arts et des Lettres’. Interestingly, he didn’t start his first shop in France but in Japan. His first pastry boutique is in Tokyo on the year 2000. He only opens his first shop in Paris in 2002. The reason was supposedly due to his contract with Ladurée as he used to work there. I guess it’s only fair.

I knew it is not easy to carry these delicate pastry and they have the tenancy to get crushed or too moist over time. So, I was very careful to pack them in a Tupperware (YES – I carry Tupperware with me when I travel especially for business trip) and lo and behold ! I manage to bring back macarons which are still fresh looking and Not crushed !!! bear in mind that I bought it one day before I flight + afternoon flight the next day + 13 hours flight + one more day before I eat them = at least 64 hours. Amazing right?

 

I invited some close friends over to enjoy it together. By the end of the night, we manage to slowly polished off all these babies and M. Hermé convinced me to fall in love with macarons !!! Many people say he doesn’t stick to the original tradition and some of his flavours are too bold and quirky compared to Ladurée. But then, if you think about it, Ladurée also moved away from the original macaron to create what it is today. So, maybe it’s about time it got re-invented? 🙂

My Favourites that night? (not in particular order)

Crème Brûlée / Infiniment Vanille / Infiniment Caramel / Truffe Blanche & Noisette / Mogador

← Older posts

Pages

  • About Chuletz
December 2011
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
« Nov   Jan »

Chulet’s Recent Rant

  • My New Toy – Canon Selphy CP1300 (Pink)
  • My Kitchen Toy – Food Vacuum Sealer
  • Homemade Pork Satay during MCO
  • 3 years later
  • Moutain Buggy Nano travel stroller

Top Posts & Pages

  • Blue Swimmer Crab a.k.a. Flower Crab – Cooked and Stored for special day
  • 3 Phase vs. 1 Phase Electric Power (Home Reno)
  • Restaurant Tak Kee – Gohtong Jaya, Malaysia
  • Seow Man Hot Soups - Semenyih, Malaysia
  • The 3 S in Mattress – Simmons, Serta and Sealy

Categories

  • Chulet Miracle Journey
  • Chuletzionary
  • Diving
  • Everything else…
  • Festival
    • Christmas
  • Friends
  • Gastronomy
    • Baking
    • Home Cook Food
    • Local Restaurants
    • Oversea Restaurants
  • Home
    • Renovation
  • Journaling
  • Medical related
  • Mini Getaways
  • Part of Chulet
    • Au Revior
    • Exercise
    • Family
    • Movie
    • Musical / Theatre
  • Shopping
    • Baby Related items
    • Bags
    • Bed Linen
    • Birthday
    • Cosmetics
    • Furniture
    • Gadgets
    • Garden
    • Gift
    • Kitchen wares
    • Medication
    • Pampering
  • Travel
    • Australia
    • Austria
    • China
    • France
    • Germany
    • Hong Kong
    • Italy
    • Japan
    • Local (Malaysia)
    • Singapore
    • Switzerland
    • Thailand
    • UK
    • USA
  • Under the Sea
  • Wedding

Archives

2012 Alés american ginseng Antibes asience Australia beach beer Birthday breakfast cast iron pot char siew chicken christmas Coq au vin crab dinner Duck Dusseldorf dutch oven Fish flowers flu foie gras Food Crawl France Frangipani french toast Germany H1N1 haze Holiday home cook home reno honey hong kong imigran ipoh Japanese Japanese Cuisine Japanese Restaurant Juan les Pins kitchen Kota Damansara kuala lumpur Lobster lunch Melbourne meng kee migraine Mother's Day Oyster panadeine panadol Paris Pasta pau-sam Penang pork satay Pregnant rain Ramen Renovation romantic dinner seremban favourites shah alam Shopping Singapore Staub Thailand traditional treatment wedding wedding planning wedding ring zomig

Chuletz's Friends

  • Dishing it
  • donnowhat2cook
  • Memoirs of a Chocoholic
  • My Flavour 2.0
  • Soo Jin
  • Stories International wedding photography
Follow Little Chulet's World on WordPress.com

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • Little Chulet's World
    • Join 56 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Little Chulet's World
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...