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David Guas

Damgoodsweet Consulting, LLC

In September 2007, Pastry Chef David Guas exchanges his longtime corporate role for an entrepreneurial path that includes private consultation, boutique catering, cookbook authoring, and, eventually, his own retail bakery. Damgoodsweet Consulting Group, LLC, the irreverent name he has given his company, is the perfect description for all of his work. In the beginning, however, odds were against the native New Orleanian having a culinary career at all. His family expected him to become a doctor. It was clear to this young man, however, that becoming a chef was his calling and the only path he could ever consider. Fortunately for Guas, his family background actually helped him chase his dream, all the way to the nation’s capital where, for nearly ten years he was the Executive Pastry Chef of Acadiana, Ceiba, DC Coast, and TenPenh restaurants. In the Guas family, all gatherings and entertainment centered around food. From a very early age, during visits from his Cuban relatives, the curious boy seemed always to be playing indoors and not outside with the other kids. In this family, it was not always the women taking charge in the kitchen. Guas’ first mentor, his grandfather, inspired and taught him that being in the kitchen did not make him any less of a man. “Abuelo” (grandfather) opened Guas’ eyes to appreciate the cuisine of his Cuban heritage. “When Abuelo was visiting, my lunch changed drastically and my classmates knew from a single whiff of my lunch bag who had packed it that day.” Guas has fond memories of the pressed Cuban sandwiches with extra pickles and mustard. Whenever Abuelo visited, he prepared a new Cuban dish for his family to taste. “If only I had written down the recipes, I would have my first cookbook already,” Guas laments. There was, in fact, a strong feminine influence as well, right in his own backyard, in the form of his grandmother from Amite, Louisiana. “Granny” could often be found in the kitchen “burning” flour and butter in an iron skillet and promising that it was “goin’ to be good eatin’.” She taught Guas to appreciate the fruits of Louisiana’s soil, cooking with seasonal blackberries, strawberries, and even wild berries from the back woods. “It was so much fun picking berries or visiting nearby fruit and vegetable stands with my cousins first thing in the morning,” remembers Guas. Unlike most native Louisianians, who used large amounts of sugar and butter in everything they cooked, Guas’ Granny stewed and puréed the fruits naturally, often blending them with savory herbs to flavor poultry and meats. Sunday morning breakfast was a ritualistic gathering, with buckwheat or cornbread pancakes and puréed fig preserves or fruit syrup, all natural and no sugar added. (But don’t think for a minute that Guas didn’t sneak any of the butter tucked away in the fridge, which was, after all, an acceptable sneak with Granny – because she had made it!) Unwittingly, the young Guas was learning techniques he would eventually incorporate into his future desserts. The base provided by Guas’ family was strong. Add to that a natural talent and a passion for updating timeless desserts, and you have a recipe for success. Guas doesn’t boast a formal culinary degree, but a few specialized cooking classes at a small culinary school in New Orleans taught him the basic, classical preparations, as well as certain cutting-edge techniques he needed to secure a job in a high-profile kitchen. As an associate pastry chef at the Windsor Court Hotel in New Orleans with Executive Chef Jeff Tunks at the helm, Guas churned out thousands of desserts per week to the delight of locals and national critics alike. Tunks took notice of this talented young assistant and began courting him: Tunks was leaving New Orleans to open his own restaurant in Washington, DC, and he needed a pastry chef. Guas packed up his bags and went off to Washington. DC Coast opened in June 1998 to critical acclaim. TenPenh followed two years later in August 2000, to more of the same, and Guas became Executive Pastry Chef, splitting his time between the two restaurants. In September 2003, he drew deeply from his Cuban heritage to create Latin American- and Caribbean-inspired desserts for Ceiba. And two years after that, in September 2005, with the opening of Acadiana, Guas developed sophisticated interpretations of his hometown dessert favorites from beignets to Bananas Foster. During his years with Passion Food Hospitality, Guas’ desserts were recognized and praised by such publications as Food & Wine, Chocolatier, Santé, Cooking Light, Food Arts, Where Washington, Restaurant Digest, Restaurant Business, National Culinary Review, and Nation’s Restaurant News. In September 2003, Bon Appétit featured Guas as one of eight “Dessert Stars” in the country. In 2004, the fourth year he was nominated, Guas was named Pastry Chef of the Year by the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington. He is listed in The International Who’s Who of Chefs, and has appeared regularly on The Today Show, demonstrating his expertise on national television. Of Guas’ sweets, the restaurant critic of The Washington Post writes, “I have yet to find a single dessert I can say no to,” and the critic of Washingtonian magazine states emphatically that Guas’ desserts are “worth saving room for.” Very sweet, indeed.

How To Make Rich No Bake Cheesecake

Pastry Chef David Guas demonstrates how to make simple and sweet no bake cheesecake.

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How To Make Rich No Bake Cheesecake

Ingredients

8 ounces of cream cheese
Cup of sour cream
5 tablespoons granulated sugar
Salt
1 1/2 Gelatin sheets
2 tablespoons Goats milk caramel
Vanilla extract
Heavy cream

Instructions

1. Hydrate the gelatin sheets in ice water until they become soft.


2. Melt the cream cheese in a pot on the stove. Add the softened gelatin and whisk until the gelatin is completely dissolved.


3. Mix the sour cream, sugar and heavy cream in an electric mixer for a minute or so. Add the vanilla extract.


4. Once a soft peak is achieved, add about a third of the partially whipped cold mixture into the warm mixture on the stove and whisk to work out any lumps. 


5. Add the remaining soft peak and make sure there are no lumps by folding, go from the center and fold inwards, cleaning the sides of the bowl and smoothing out lumps.


6. Portion it out into coffee cups and place the portions into the refrigerator for at least 4 hours.


7. Once the cheesecake is set, pour the goats milk caramel on top and serve. 

 

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Transcripts

David Guas: Hi, I am David Guas with Damgoodsweet Consulting Group in Washington D.

C. area and we are here to talk about non-baked cheese cake that we are about to do. So as far as ingredients go, the reason its non-baked cheese cake and never sees an oven, is because of gelatin. Here I used gelatin sheets, but you can also use powdered gelatin and the conversion between the two is on the back of the container. But in this case, you can buy this from some Specialty Markets, and what you have to do because it's a dry product, is that you have to hydrate in some ice water, which I have already done here. It's called blooming. When you bloom the gelatin, it hydrates itself and becomes soft. What we have done is, we have our 8 ounces of cream cheese already here on the stove, and essentially I am going to remove that from the boiling water, which is already nice and hot. I am going to just squeeze the water out of the soften gelatin, to make sure that it's -- we are not adding water into the actual dessert. I will go ahead and take a whisk, and Ill just whisk in that soften gelatin. We can allow that to rest for a second while we add our other ingredients, which is our 1 cup of sour cream to our electric mixer. It's best to keep this in a chilled temperature prior to using it. It allows the cream to react and will whip quicker. We will add our sugar as well, that's 5 tablespoons of granulated sugar. What we are going for is something we call soft peaks, or medium peaks, where the cream begins to get a little bit of body, but isn't over whipped creating stiff peaks. At this point, I am going to go ahead and add my vanilla extract. Remove this from the machine and we will do a fancy thing called folding and we will fold in this partially whipped, but just about a third of it we will go in first. Then we will whisk this together smooth and what's that's doing is we have a cold mixture with a warm mixture and this allow any lumps to get worked out. At that point, you can add the remaining soft peak with mixture. What we do is we fold, and folding is just a gentle technique that's done by the wrist and we are taking going in from the center and we are just folding that mixture until it's fully incorporated, cleaning our sides, making sure again there is no lumps. This mixture is essentially ready for portioning. Portion the mixture directly into the cup, filling it about two thirds of the way, and you want to allow at least four hours to set up. You can even do this the night before. Here we have the finished product, which is a set version of the cheese cake, which is seen about six hour in the refrigerator. At this point, we have something called Cajeta, which is a Mexican caramel made from goats milk. You have to make sure that your cheese cake is fully set after which you can top it with a light layer of the Cajeta and I like to serve it with the spoon almost like a coffee set on a saucer and that is our non baked cheese cake with Cajeta, goats milk caramel.

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