Showing posts with label Bill Yosses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Yosses. Show all posts

White House Holiday Recipe: Roasted Potatoes

Presidential holiday food, heavy on garlic...
President Obama
and First Lady Obama entertained thousands of guests this year at the annual White House holiday receptions. The menu, served on buffet tables in the East Room and in the State Dining Room, featured roast beef, turkey, ham, seafood, and a selection of vegetable sides, including roasted new potatoes. (Above: A bowl of the potatoes on a buffet table)

Due to security concerns, guests are not allowed to use knives at holiday parties, so many menu items were "bite sized," including the potatoes. The recipe, created by Executive Chef Cris Comerford, is garlicy, lemony, and delicious. The potatoes are terrific for all holiday parties, whether for Hanukkah, Christmas, or New Year's, and can also be made with fingerling potatoes.

Click here for the White House Holiday Dessert Collection, a compendium of the recipes for the sweet treats, created by Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses, that were also served at the holiday parties. Check the sidebar of the blog for all Presidential recipes.

White House Holiday Roasted Potatoes

Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.

Ingredients
2 pounds new potatoes, washed and dried

2 sprigs fresh rosemary

3 sprigs fresh thyme

6 cloves garlic, unpeeled

1 lemon, zest and juice

3 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

Kosher salt and pepper to taste

Method
1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.

2. Place a baking sheet lined with foil into the oven to preheat.

3. In a bowl combine the potatoes, rosemary, thyme, garlic, lemon zest, and juice. Drizzle with the olive oil and mix thoroughly.

4. Spoon the mixture onto the preheated pan. Roast for 20 minutes or until the potatoes are browned on the skin and tender inside. (Poke with a fork to check for doneness.)

5. When potatoes are cool enough to handle, rub the garlic on.

6. Serve warm.

##

*This recipe was adapted for home use by cookbook author and food writer Marian Burros, who this year
joined Obama Foodorama.

*Photo by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

White House Holiday Photo Of The Day


Christmas trees made of the same kind of Macaroons that were served at this year's many Presidential holiday parties stand beside the 400-lb white chocolate-covered White House Gingerbread House, crated by Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses and his team, and on display in the State Dining Room. There is a forest of four trees on each side of the spectacular house; the two made with apples are made of marzipan and sparkling sugar.

Click here for all the Holiday Photos of the Day, taken by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama.

White House Holiday Photo Of The Day

These vanilla, chocolate, and green tea Macaroons were among the treats being served at President Obama and First Lady Obama's holiday receptions at the White House. Read all about the Presidential holiday parties here.

Behind The Scenes At The Presidential Holiday Parties: The Protocol, The Menus, The Mingling...

The President and Mrs. Obama celebrate the holidays with thousands of guests and an incredible menu of traditional American favorites, served at buffets designed for maximum security...
"Business attire" is the sartorial suggestion printed on the cream-colored cards sent to invite guests to President Obama and First Lady Obama's holiday receptions, which have been going on almost daily since right after Thanksgiving. Despite the fashion guidance, there were women wearing evening gowns--complete with fur coats and jewels--at the evening party I attended. (Above: Guests at a reception surround a buffet table in the State Dining Room)

A fashion faux pas? Perhaps, but the glam revelers did not seem too out of place. The "Shine, Give, Share" decor theme that honors members of the military and their families gives the candle-lit White House a high fanciness quotient: It is filled with miles of pine garlands, shining ribbon, fairy lights, glittering ornaments, lush floral arrangements, and 37 Christmas trees, not to mention decorative images of First Dog Bo in almost every room. I also ignored "business attire," and wore a black cocktail dress, for the record.

"The President and I are at every holiday party," Mrs. Obama said this week. "And we shake almost every hand or take a picture, and we usually do them twice a day."

Each party has a guest list of hundreds, and each guest may bring a companion. The days of double Presidential party duty have back-to-back receptions: Afternoon shindigs begin at 3:00 PM, and the evening editions begin at 6:00 PM, and last as late as 10:00 PM. At the party I attended, I was happy to note that the First Lady also ignored the sartorial advice on the invitations. She was lovely in a pale gold brocade dress with spaghetti straps, and copper-colored pumps. Her hair was down and straight. America's most famous wardrobe recycler, Mrs. Obama's dress was the same one she wore in March of this year, when she and the President attended an official dinner hosted by El Salvador's President Mauricio Funes. President Obama wore a dark suit--for both occasions. (Above: Mrs. Obama toasts at the Funes dinner)

For all Presidential couples, the receiving line is a grueling holiday tradition. The President and Mrs. Obama are on their feet for hours as they greet their guests in the ground floor Diplomatic Reception Room. It is set up like a photo studio, with big lights and white silk screens, where guests pose with the First Couple. The receiving line is conducted with military precision; dozens of uniformed aides are on hand to escort guests through the heady gauntlet.

A lavish but traditional American menu...designed to be eaten without the use of a knife...
The kitchen staff, led by Executive Chef Cris Comerford, works far more than overtime during the holidays, producing a staggering amount of food. Like every meal at the White House, the incredible holiday buffets, served simultaneously in both the East Room and in the State Dining Room, spotlight American regional foods. (Above: Assistant chef David Larson works the carving station; the blurry guest is Carl Anthony, a well-known First Lady historian)

The menu was designed so guests could enjoy it without the use of knives: Due to Presidential security concerns, knives are forbidden at holiday receptions (knives are allowed at events such as State Dinners, however). Honey-baked ham and roasted turkey served from a carving station in the East Room were very thinly sliced by assistant chef David Larson, the only man for miles around who held a knife. The ham was accompanied by a sharp mustard sauce, with gravy and a sweet and spicy cranberry sauce for the turkey.

Stuffing is served at the carving station, too, in a unique form: It's molded into balls, an innovation created during the Bush Administration, according to Larson. who said that more than 12,000 stuffing balls were made for this year's parties. These were frozen in advance, and then cooked each day. They're wildly popular, he noted. And tasty, too, I might add. (Above: A bowl of stuffing balls)

The laden buffet tables were constantly replenished by black-clad serving staff. There were dishes of rare roast beef cut into bite-size chunks, also due to the no-knife policy. Bowls of baby roasted potatoes with garlic sat beside platters of potato pancakes with scallions.

Oysters on the half shell, shrimp, and Stone crab claws awaited retrieval from atop bowls of ice, accompanied by a spicy cocktail sauce and a gourmet version of tartar sauce. Last year, the White House ordered more than 2,000 pounds of Gulf seafood for the holiday parties, but ordering quantities for this year were not announced. (Above: A tray of Oysters beside a bowl of shrimp and Stone crab claws. Potato pancakes and smoked salmon are in the background)

Rolls of smoked salmon were on triple-tiered serving trees, surrounded by bowls with capers, sliced red onions, red tomato chutney, and a lemon dill sauce.

Of course there were plenty of vegetables served. Roasted green beans, carrots, and root vegetables were accompanied by a creamy garlic sauce, while crisp steamed vegetables, which included yellow and white carrots as well as asparagus, baby eggplant, and green beans, were served with a mustard sauce and a cream sauce. A salad of romaine, frisee, and radicchio with blue cheese, walnuts and a champagne vinaigrette was offered, too. Dinner rolls were on each buffet table, as were platters with a rich selection of artisanal cheese, accompanied by whole grain crackers, dried dates and nuts, and fresh strawberries.

The menu is the same for every reception, with the exception of the President and Mrs. Obama's Hanukkah party, which had a special Kosher menu. More than 550 guests attended, including Members of Congress and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg. No oysters, shrimp, or ham were anywhere in evidence, of course...and a Rabbi provided the koshering services for the kitchen.

The White House holiday parties would not be possible without the invention of freezing. The seafood is delivered to the White House, "fresh" frozen, and stored in two huge outdoor walk-in freezers. The hundreds of pounds of dough used for the thousands of holiday cookies that are served is also frozen. The pastry shop makes the dough months ahead of the holidays, according to Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses. The decorated sweet dough cookies are cut into all kinds of holiday shapes, including cookies shaped like Bo, which are the most popular. (Above: Roast beef)

Some of the holiday receptions are for specific groups; the one I attended was for journalists. Other parties have no particular "theme" or identifiable group of guests. But at every reception, top White House officials mingle with the revelers, putting the social occasion to good use. "Oh yes, I'm at all of these," Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives Sam Kass told me, before we had a long talk about farm policy with Jerry Hagstrom, an acclaimed agriculture journalist. Mrs. Obamas COS, Tina Tchen, was also working the State Floor, as were many other aides. (Above: Kass and Hagstrom)

The White House is the most historic living museum in America, but during holiday parties, velvet ropes are removed, and guests can roam the State Floor, free to enjoy their dinner while sitting on the priceless antiques in the Green Room and the Red Room, as well as almost everywhere else. A very merry US Marine Corps orchestra, clad in red dress uniforms with gold braid, was installed in the Grand Foyer, playing holiday carols among the soaring pillars and Christmas trees that glitter in the marble hall.

The dessert buffet...
Pie is THE favored dessert at the White House, a culinary detail that is freely shared by everyone from the President and First Lady to policy aides who have nothing to do with the kitchen. (Above: The dessert table in the East Room; a berry pie is in front)

"The President loooooves pie," Mrs. Obama said on Monday.

The beautiful pastry tables included a tart Berry Pie and the now-legendary White House Apple Pie.

There was also a Berry Crumble topped with a cinnamon topping, and Sticky Toffee Pudding, a rich steamed dessert made with sponge cake covered with toffee sauce. There was Coconut Cake, Gingerbread Cake, Vanilla Yule Log, Strawberry Shortcake piled high with whipped cream and fresh strawberries, and Pumpkin Cake. Opera Cake and Tiramisu were served in tiny squares. An array of tiny chocolates was also on offer, including dark chocolates in the shape of cats and mice with red and green ribbon tails, as well as penguins. Dark and light chocolate balls were also piled in dishes. (Above: Berry Pie)

There were plenty of other cookies, too, besides those shaped like Bo. Caramel Clusters with pecans were addictive, and there were also moist and airy Macaroons in multiple flavors, including green tea, espresso and vanilla. (Above: A guest's dessert selections. In front is Opera Cake and Tiramisu; in back is Gingerbread Cake, cookies, and chocolates. Macaroons are in the background)

I witnessed one of the evening-gown clad guests, who perhaps had had a bit too much of the very creamy Egg Nog that was being served, drop a large piece of berry pie on the priceless rug in the State Dining Room.

Three black-clad staffers materialized immediately, armed with spray bottles and towels to mitigate the damage. The mess was gone in an instant. Newly installed Chief Usher Angela Reid seemed to be everywhere, not only overseeing the repair of such potential domestic disasters, but also greeting guests and spreading good cheer. Not in uniform, and not wearing a name tag, she went largely unrecognized, though she is a history maker, the first woman ever to be appointed Chief Usher. (Above: Coconut Cake, with Strawberry Shortcake in the background at left, and Caramel Clusters at right)

Daniel Shanks
, the food and beverage manager who is better known as the White House wine steward, also seemed to be everywhere at once. Social Secretary Jeremy Bernard was with the President and Mrs. Obama in the Diplomatic Reception Room.

White House bottle service...
A full bar was set up in the East Room, manned by very friendly bartenders who not only poured drinks, but also performed double duty as shutterbugs. All evening, guests were handing over their cameras, so they could be photographed against the backdrop of the glittery East Room, which has Christmas trees that feature natural crystals as ornaments.

The wines that were poured, as is tradition at the White House, were American, and included a 2010 Chardonnay from Cardiff vineyards in California, and a 2009 CuvĂ©e, a Pinot Noir from Anne Amie, a vineyard in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. The beer was also American, and included Yuengling Light from Pennsylvania and India Pale Ale from Dogfish Head Craft Brewed Ales in Delaware. Even some of the spirits were American: Hangar 1 vodka, from California, was among the pours, as was Jack Daniels whisky from Tennessee. Wait staff roamed the halls, carrying trays of champagne flutes, as well as non-alcoholic fruit punch.

The holiday receptions finish today. In addition to the thousands of guests who attended the parties, about 85,000 guests viewed the White House decor during daily tours.

On Friday, the First Lady will depart with daughters Malia and Sasha for the First Family's annual Christmas vacation in Hawaii. President Obama has pledged to remain in town until Congress finishes its business. (Above: The savory buffet table in the State Dining Room, with the cheese tray visible in the foreground)

*White House Holiday recipes: Pumpkin Cake with Orange Cream Cheese icing is here. The recipe for Holiday Apple Cake with Maple Glaze is here; the recipe for Holiday Honey Cupcakes is here; the recipe for Holiday Gingerbread Cookies is here; the recipe for Holiday Sweet Dough Butter Cookies is here.

Fun stuff: Download the 2011 White House Holiday Tour Book [PDF]. Click here for all the 2011 White House Holiday Photos of the Day.

*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama, except for the photo of the First Lady; that's by Pete Souza/White House.

2011 Holiday Recipe: White House Pumpkin Cake With Orange Cream Cheese Icing

A rich, spiced treat from the White House to your house...
Led by Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses, the White House pastry shop turns out thousands of cookies and hundreds of cakes, pies, and other sweets for President Obama and First Lady Obama's many holiday receptions. These are served on beautiful buffet tables in both the East Room, where the largest buffet service is, and in the State Dining Room. Black-coated waiters replenish the supply of treats constantly. (Above: The dessert table in the State Dining Room is beside the White House Gingerbread House)

"The President and I are at every holiday party," Mrs. Obama said on Monday as she visited with youngsters at the Children's National Medical Center. "We have almost two every day for two weeks."

Most guests get to both shake hands and take photos with the Obamas, in what is a grueling holiday tradition: The President and First Lady are on duty, on their feet, in the Diplomatic Reception Room for hours as they greet their visitors.

Guests have it far easier. Their toughest job is selecting from the array of rich, moist cakes on the buffet tables, which include Coconut Cake, Gingerbread Cake, Vanilla Yule Log, Strawberry Shortcake, Opera Cake, Tiramisu, and Pumpkin Cake. Pumpkins are grown in Mrs. Obama's Kitchen Garden, and the White House has released the recipe for the holiday cake that stars the Presidential squash. It's spiced with cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and cloves, which balance the sweetness of the orange cream cheese icing. Like most White House recipes, it's fairly easy, and requires a 2-quart bundt cake pan. An electric mixer will make things easier, but is not absolutely required.

White House Pumpkin Cake
with Orange Cream Cheese Icing

Ingredients for the Cake
*2 cups all-purpose flour

*1 teaspoon salt

*2 teaspoons cinnamon

*1 1⁄2 teaspoons ground ginger

*1⁄2 teaspoon nutmeg

*1⁄4 teaspoon ground cloves

*3⁄4 teaspoon baking soda

*2 teaspoons baking powder

*1 1⁄4 cups dark brown sugar

*4 eggs

*1⁄4 cup whole milk, warmed

*3⁄4 cup vegetable oil

*7 ounces of pumpkin puree (either homemade or from a can)

Method
Pre-heat the oven to 340° F. Grease and flour a 2-quart bundt pan.

1. Sift the flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, ground ginger, baking soda, nutmeg, and ground cloves into a large bowl. Put this aside.

2. Whisk together brown sugar and eggs with a mixer.

3. Beat in the vegetable oil and then the pumpkin puree.

4. Add the dry ingredients mixture, alternating with the whole milk in three parts.

5. Mix well and scrape the sides and bottom of bowl between each part.

6. Pour into bundt pan. Bake for about one hour, or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.

Let the cake cool in the pan and then turn out onto a cooling rack.

Pour the orange cream cheese icing over the top of the cooled bundt cake.


Makes one cake.

Ingredients for the Icing
*1 cup confectioners’ sugar

*1 tablespoon fine orange zest

*2 teaspoons vanilla extract

*6 ounces butter, softened

*2 tablespoons heavy cream

*1 pound cream cheese, room temperature

*Pinch of salt

*1⁄2 cup fresh-squeezed orange juice, strained

Method
1. Place cream cheese and confectioners’ sugar in a bowl, and use a mixer until it becomes a smooth cream. If you are using a standing mixer, use the paddle attachment for the best results.

2. Add the softened butter to the bowl and mix.

3. Scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl with a plastic spatula and then add the orange zest, vanilla bean or extract, heavy cream, pinch of salt and orange juice. Mix.

4. Set the icing aside until you are ready to pour over cake.

*Decorate with candied ginger or orange slices, if desired.

Other White House holiday recipes: The recipe for Holiday Apple Cake with Maple Glaze is here; the recipe for Holiday Honey Cupcakes is here; the recipe for Holiday Gingerbread Cookies is here; the recipe for Holiday Sweet Dough Butter Cookies is here.

*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama; the cake, above, is beside fresh strawberries, Vanilla Yule Log, and Coconut Cake.

Video: Bill Yosses Lectures At Harvard

The Executive Pastry Chef talks "Lip' Smackin' Science" to Ivy League students...
As he did last Fall, Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses recently gave a lecture at Harvard University on the science of food, also known as molecular gastronomy. The master of the White House sugar operation since 2006, and an exceptional gingerbread architect, Yosses is also a devoted food scientist, and pushes the boundaries of cooking. His lecture was part of the Ivy League university's Cooking & Science Lecture Series, and had a standing-room-only crowd. (Above: Yosses in action)

Yosses was assisted by pastry chef Najat Kaanache, who worked at elBulli in Spain, acclaimed as the world's best restaurant until it closed this summer. The video, titled "Lip Smackin' Science: Crystals, Emulsions, Foams, and Pink Vanilla Cupcakes," is more than an hour and a half long, but it's a treat to watch.

Must-See White House Holiday TV

HGTV will premiere its annual special on the holiday extravaganza at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue this Sunday, when White House Christmas 2011 airs at 8:00 PM. Designer Genevieve Gorder takes viewers behind the scenes for a look at how this year's holiday theme, "Shine, Give, Share," was created. Executive Chef Cristeta Comerford discusses the foods being served at the many holiday parties, and Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses talks about his white chocolate-covered White House Gingerbread House.

First Dog Bo, who is all over the holiday decor, is also featured. Gorder speaks to dozens of the staff members and volunteers who worked to transform the First Family's home, which will be viewed by about 85,000 visitors over the next several weeks. The special includes the First Family attending the National Christmas Tree lighting ceremony. Check your local listings.

*Photo by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

White House Holiday Photo Of The Day

Comfort & joy, cookie edition...
A member of the White House residence staff waits to deliver a triple tier of holiday cookies to a serving table. Click here to read about the pastry shop's massive holiday cookie operation. Click here to read about the White House Gingerbread House, a masterpiece made of cookie dough.

*Photo by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses On The Record: The 2011 White House Gingerbread House

This year's 400-pound showpiece has working lights, four fully furnished rooms, a replica of the Kitchen Garden, First Dog Bo, and a Christmas forest...
Were he alive today, White House architect James Hoban might be stunned to discover that his most famous building is annually re-created in gingerbread for Christmas at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The tradition became a yearly part of holiday celebrations when Roland Mesnier, who ruled the pastry kitchen for more than a quarter of a century, made houses each Christmas during the Carter Administration. Mesnier's houses became more and more elaborate over the ensuing Presidencies, but his successor, Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses, has taken the building project to a whole new level. All five of Yosses' White House Gingerbread Houses have been covered in white chocolate, and the 2011 house is his best and most detailed effort yet.

Every element is edible, with the exception of the working electric lighting that's inside and outside. There are four interior rooms, a model of First Lady Michelle Obama's Kitchen Garden and beehive, First Dog Bo, and a forest of Christmas trees. Displayed on a marble-topped console table in the State Dining Room throughout the holiday season, the house is a showstopper that delights children and adults.

Yosses (l) first came to the White House at the invitation of First Lady Laura Bush for the 2006 holiday season. But he built his first Gingerbread House for Christmas 2007; Mesnier came out of retirement specifically to do the 2006 house, Yosses told Obama Foodorama. "What a relief!" Yosses added; the idea of building such a grand project during his debut months was apparently a bit daunting, even for someone who was already an acclaimed pastry chef, hailed for work that was described as "unfailingly elegant, restrained and imaginative."

Each of Yosses' three houses for President Obama and Mrs. Obama have all been the same view of the South Portico because "it got great feedback," Yosses said.

The pastry master references copies of Hoban's original building sketches as he works. The white chocolate architectural details, such as columns, banisters, and rosettes, are poured in special molds, and are historically accurate. Yosses began his culinary career while living in France, and was mentored by Pierre Herme, the nation's premier pastry chef. It was then that he learned the arts of chocolate decor and sugar blowing. (Above: A view of the left side of the house)

Building the White House Gingerbread House takes months, and Assistant Pastry Chef Susie Morrison acts as "general contractor." The gingerbread was baked in late September, in order to allow it to go stale and become hard. It's more than an inch thick, and so hard a band saw is used to cut the walls and roof, Yosses said. The recipe is the same used for the White House Gingerbread Cookies, but on a far larger scale.

The project is a group effort for White House staff that extends beyond the pastry kitchen. The house is assembled in the China Room, a ground-floor room where presidential china is displayed year-round in lit cabinets (the room is currently being used for the holiday tour, and features a Christmas dinner table set with the Clinton State China).

"We have the electricians do the lighting," Yosses said. The working lights inside and out are environmentally friendly, and glow softly. "Plumbers, carpenters, engineers get in on it, too."

The 2011 house weighs about 400 pounds, and is 41 inches wide and 22 inches deep. Its four furnished rooms are two more than were in the 2010 Gingerbread House, which had shadow-box views of the State Dining Room and the East Room. Those rooms are also in the 2011 house, but so are the Green Room and the Red Room, drawing rooms on the State Floor. All are visible through windows covered with clear-sugar panes. (Above: The State Dining Room and Red Room are visible through the window behind Bo, as are working silver floodlights)

"The Social Office wanted us to develop new rooms, so it was more like a Christmas doll house," Yosses explained.

The 2009 Gingerbread House had only the State Dining Room visible as a shadow box. This year, the interior furnishings, including sofas, tables, and paintings, are made of white and dark chocolate, with marzipan and food coloring for accents. The details are "very time consuming," Yosses said.

"It takes a lot of patience to get shape and proportion right."

Bo is depicted in many incarnations in the 2011 holiday decor, thanks to the fact that "he's the most famous member of the Obama family," according to the First Lady, who selected "Shine, Give, Share," as her theme, designed to honor military families. Yosses dubbed his 2010 marzipan and gum paste rendition of the First Dog "Bozilla" because he was oversized; his head went up to the second story of the house. This year's Bo is Bozilla on steroids: He's even larger, and would be about the size of a Chevy Yukon if he was real.

"If Bo looks a little fluffier, it's because we used royal icing, so he can be shaped more precisely," Yosses said.

Bo is indeed fluffier. In 2009, Bo was far smaller, but his larger-than-life depiction is a metaphor for his importance to the Obama household, Yosses said last year.

The Kitchen Garden and the beehive...
The model of the Kitchen Garden, created with marzipan, sugar and gum paste, shows the South Lawn garden in winter. The beds are in chocolate powder dirt, and are covered with sheets of pastry to replicate the protective hoop houses that cover the real garden so it can grow vegetables year-round. Two other boxed beds, made of chocolate, are "dormant" for the season, and covered with "straw." There's a line of winter lettuces visible, as well as the composter that sits beside the garden. (Above: The garden and the beehive)

Tiny shovels sit in the chocolate dirt, and dark chocolate squares are used for the slate stepping stones in the real garden. The White House beehive has also been replicated.

Yosses routinely uses honey from the beehive for his many desserts. The hive is the first to ever be on the White House grounds, and is depicted complete with tiny bees. The yellow line on the candy beehive is actually a strap that's on the real beehive. It's designed to keep the hive in place so it doesn't blow over when President Obama arrives on the South Lawn in his helicopter, Marine One. (Above: The bees are visible on the beehive)

About thirty pounds of honey was used to make the Gingerbread House, as it was in 2009 and 2010.

The Christmas forest...
The forest of four Christmas trees on each side of the house is a new addition for 2011. The cone-shaped trees are made with white and dark chocolate macaroons and marzipan, as well as molded fruit, and wrapped with sparkling ribbons and dusted with silvery sugar powder.

"Bushes" along each side of the house are created with real Magnolia flowers. These are taken from South Lawn bushes planted from President Andrew Jackson's Magnolia tree that still stands on the White House grounds. Each is dipped in green chocolate, and embellished with red chocolate "flowers." (Above: The Christmas trees and Magnolia bushes on the right side of the house)

While the house is made of edible materials, it is not intended to actually be eaten. All the same, each year, architectural elements have gone missing, Yosses said, either eaten or taken by tour guests as "souvenirs."

"We notice sometimes a few pieces missing like parapets and windowsills and pediments, so we make extras and they can be replaced right away," Yosses said.

More than 85,000 visitors will tour the White House during the holiday season. A few thousand more will attend between 15-18 open houses and receptions that the President and Mrs. Obama will host.

Not the heaviest White House Gingerbread House...
At 400 pounds, the 2011 house is not the heaviest Yosses has created, he said: The open interior spaces for the four rooms reduces the weight. Yosses' heaviest house was built in 2008 for the last Christmas of the Bush presidency; the whopping 475 pounder, for "A Red, White and Blue Christmas," was 350 pounds of gingerbread and 125 pounds of white chocolate. The Bush family pets were in a rooftop sleigh, and an Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps, all edible, marched in front. Mrs. Bush dubbed the house "unbelievable" and "beautiful." (Above: A view of the house from the right side)

The White House Gingerbread House is usually sent to the White House Visitors Center after the holidays, where it is put on display so more people can see it. But this year, there's another exhibit, and the final destination for the masterpiece is still undecided. (Above: Yosses, Morrison, and pastry chef Chris Philips assembling last year's house in the China Room)

Last summer, Yosses published "The Perfect Finish," a collection of recipes from his vast personal repertoire. It's loaded with delicious creations that are accompanied by detailed instructions and beautiful photos, and makes a terrific holiday gift. It was the first cookbook published by any White House chef while "still in office."

The 2010 White House Gingerbread House:

Check the sidebar of the blog under "Dessert Recipes" for all of Yosses' White House creations that have been publicly released.

The 2009 White House Gingerbread House:

*With additional reporting by Marian Burros.

*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama. China Room photo from HGTV.

At White House Holiday Tweetup, Visitors Learn About Everything From Policy To Pie

150 Tweeps briefed by top aides and residence staff before going on holiday tour...Videos of speakers...
It was an exciting day at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue for the 150 citizens attending Monday's first-ever White House Holiday Tweetup. In a mixture of policy and seasonal fun, the specially selected visitors, all followers of the @WhiteHouse Twitter account, mingled with top Administration officials as well as Residence staff. During a morning briefing, they heard from First Lady Michelle Obama's Chief of Staff, Tina Tchen, and Aneesh Chopra, the first federal Chief Technology Officer, and from Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses and chief florist Laura Dowling. (Above: Yosses and Dowling speaking during the Tweetup)

Armed with their personal communication devices, the Tweetup gang sent--or attempted to send--tweets and photos detailing their holiday outing in the halls of power. It was, according to attendee @Tiffany, "basically nerds w/phones tripping over each other."

"I haven't baked at home in the last three months," Yosses joked from the stage of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, as he described his crushing holiday pastry schedule, and his creation of the 400-pound White House Gingerbread House. Pie, he said, is President Obama's favorite dessert. Six kinds were served for the First Family's Thanksgiving feast.

Dowling described the many flowers and Christmas trees filling the White House, and included details of a "Floral Face-Off" among volunteers competing to make the best holiday arrangement. She also advised the visitors to look for statues of First Dog Bo during their afternoon decor tour; he is featured in almost every room in the residence. This year's theme is "Shine, Give, Share."

Engaging and marketing...
The guests came from twenty states and DC, @allierose tweeted. They were "educators, social media, technologists, avg citizens," tweeted @StateOfTrey. The visit, orchestrated by the Office of Public Engagement, gave the group an inside look at White House efforts to interact with citizens. Tchen covered Mrs. Obama's Let's Move! campaign as well as the Kitchen Garden, and discussed the importance of citizens interacting with the government. (Above: A Twitter photo of Tchen during her remarks)

Or as @kedunford tweeted, "Tina Tchen talked about shining forth the glitter of the season, sharing it with others & giving back to the comm."

"The biggest surprise of the #whtweetup was the resonance of citizen engagement. Staff of the most powerful man on earth asking us for help," tweeted @marctomik.

Jon Carson, Director of the Office of Public Engagement, tweeted his own observation about efforts at connecting with citizens: "The government is not the best at marketing, but we're getting better!"

The group also heard from Brad Cooper, a former US Navy officer who is now Executive Director of the Joining Forces campaign, as well as Director of Digital Strategy Macon Phillips and his deputy, Kori Schulman, who both chaperoned the group.

Presidential M&Ms but no WiFi...
Guests were gifted with the very coveted boxes of Presidential M&Ms. The red, white and blue candy is presented in a blue and white box, adorned with the Presidential seal and Mr. Obama's autograph, and got plenty of notice in the many tweets coming out of the White House. (Above: A photo of the candy, tweeted by an enthusiast)

But what the guests didn't have was access to WiFi, which was a source of consternation and surprise. Yes, it's true: The White House has no public WiFi. And cell phone reception, depending on where you are on the 18-acre campus, is often very poor, especially when inside the mansion.

"At the #whtweetup. And they have NO WIFI. For a Tweet Up. And in a room with ONE bar. #fail," wrote @KORtizzle (sic).

"Waiting in line for holiday decoration tour. Feel guilty for not tweeting as much as i can during #whtweetup but it was WH's fault: no wifi," wrote @NewsCat_in_DC (sic).

All the same, the tech issues didn't *really* spoil anyone's fun. As the day ended, the Twitter guests were tweeting their effusive thanks to the White House.

"Can't beat today's experience @whitehouse. Thanks #whtweetup," wrote @LutherLiz.

"Heading back after an amazing day! #WHtweetup Thanks to the office of public engagement @whitehouse," tweeted @Beachmom01.

The Holiday Tweetup was the sixth of the Administration, and first announced in November, and each guest selected was over the age of 18. During their visit, the guests had to pass through three different security checkpoints, and each was allowed to bring a guest. The Holiday Tweetup came on the heels of the biggest-ever White House Tweetup, held during the very soggy Arrival Ceremony for the State Visit of President Lee Myung-bak of the Republic of Korea. The first-ever tweetup for the Let's Move! campaign was in October, when the First Lady harvested the Kitchen Garden for Fall. President Obama's first Twitter Town Hall last summer began the tweetup project.

The White House videos of the briefing for the Holiday Tweeps:





*Photo of Yosses and Dowling tweeted by @HarbingerAlpha; Tchen photo tweeted by @MichelWDouglas; M&Ms photo by @eunicortiz

Behind The Scenes: White House Pastry Shop Goes Into Overdrive For Holiday Cookie Operation

The President and First Lady will entertain thousands of guests for holiday parties, and the pastry chefs hand-decorate every cookie...
In the next three weeks, the President Obama and First Lady Obama will welcome thousands of guests for afternoon and evening holiday receptions. Lucky recipients of the coveted invitations will be treated to all kinds of delights from the White House kitchen, but few are more labor intensive--or ephemeral--than the holiday cookies that will be served. Thousands of the decorated delights--shaped like First Dog Bo, Christmas trees, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, snowflakes, candy canes--are each hand-made in the White House pastry shop. It has become a high-volume production operation, a sugar-drenched version of Santa's workshop, where cookies stand in for toys. (Above: Mrs. Obama decorated cookies with her first holiday guests on Wednesday, children from military families, joined by Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses, left, and assistant pastry chef Susie Morrison)

"We'll be baking between fifteen and twenty thousand cookies," Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses told Obama Foodorama.

Cookie operation started in early Fall...
The pastry shop is located in a relatively tiny space on the ground floor of the White House, where space is tight and work surfaces limited. The chefs started making the sweet dough three months ago, and it was frozen in anticipation of December's cookie mania, Yosses said. All the same, those in the sugar shop are working very long hours throughout the holiday season. The cookie dough is defrosted on a daily basis, then cut into shapes. Tray after tray is loaded into the ovens and baked. (Above: A tiered serving tree of holiday cookies)

After cooling, each cookie is then hand-decorated with icing and sparkling sugar. There's no getting around the intense individual labor each cookie requires, to put on the base-coat of colored sugar, and different colored accents. Some cookies are more labor intensive than others: The cookie shaped like Rudolph has four colors. There's brown sparkle for the body, and white and black accents for antlers, hooves, and face. The red nose contains little flecks of sparkle, and each cookie also wears a red collar with white dots. Even for pros used to wielding pastry bags, it's a ton of effort for treats that literally vanish in seconds. (Above: The complicated Rudolph cookie is visible on this cookie platter, as are Bo cookies, snowflakes, holly leaves, and chocolate chunk cookies)

Guests tend to eat multiple cookies--as well as, er, pocket them--so the pressure is on to bake enough each day so the serving platters are kept filled.

Bo cookies are the most popular...
Bo, said Mrs. Obama this week, is "the most famous member of the Obama family." The Bo-shaped holiday cookie, decorated with a little red collar with a holly leaf, is the most popular with guests. There are also cookies shaped like bees in honor of the first-ever White House beehive, which sits on the South Lawn beside Mrs. Obama's Kitchen Garden. (Above: Bo and bee cookies)

"Everyone loves Bo," said Yosses.

Images of the First Dog are featured throughout the White House decor, which has the theme of "Shine, Give, Share" in honor of military families.

Recipes...
The recipe for the holiday cookies, also used for the White House Halloween cookies, is here. Chocolate chip cookies, shortbread cookies, and Gingerbread cookies will also be served to guests. The Gingerbread recipe is here; it can also be used to make ornaments. It's the same recipe used for the walls and roof of Yosses' spectacular White House Gingerbread House. Special cookies will be cut when the President and Mrs. Obama host their annual Hanukkah reception. (Above: A member of the Residence staff at a cookie station in the Grand Foyer; hot apple cider was also being served)

Regional foods spotlighted in buffets...
The President and Mrs. Obama will host about 17 receptions and open houses before departing for a vacation in Hawaii on December 17th, an aide said. Guests will also be treated to a big selection of foods that spotlight regional American cuisine, according to Executive Chef Cris Comerford.

These will be offered at laden buffet stations, and among other specialties will include smoked salmon; tiny lamb chops; sliced roast beef; plenty of roasted vegetables; tiny new potatoes and sweet potatoes; shrimp cocktail (more than 2,000 pounds of Gulf seafood was ordered to be served during last year's holiday season); artisan cheeses, and other holiday baked goods, such as lemon cake, chocolate cake, and Holiday Apple Cake with Maple Glaze. The recipe is here.

Click here to download the 2011 White House Holiday Tour Book for information on the decorations in each room. It also contains a recipe for a holiday pumpkin cake, and instructions for how to build the kind of paper Christmas tree that sits in the East Garden Room. (Above: A platter of holiday cookies)

Check the sidebar for more White House recipes.

*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

Wednesday: First Lady Will Unveil 2011 White House Holiday Decorations

Military families invited for first viewing, holiday crafts...
On Wednesday, Nov. 30th, as she unveils the decorations for her third holiday season in the White House, First Lady Michelle Obama will welcome military families, including Gold Star and Blue Star parents, spouses and children, for the first viewing. At 1:30 PM, Mrs. Obama will deliver remarks in the East Room, and then she will host the children in the State Dining Room for a special holiday craft and treat session.

Executive Chef Cris Comerford and Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses will demonstrate how to make edible holiday treats and decorations. White House Florist Laura Dowling will demonstrate holiday crafts. (Above: Mrs. Obama and Yosses making gingerbread cookies with kids during the 2010 holiday preview)

Yosses' annual Gingerbread replica of the White House will also be unveiled on Wednesday. Last year's white chocolate-covered extravaganza weighed 400 pounds, while the 2009 edition came in at 390 pounds. Both were created with honey from the White House Beehive, and featured marzipan miniatures of First Dog Bo, and the First Lady's Kitchen Garden. (Above: The 2009 White House Gingerbread House)

Two White House Christmas Trees will honor military families this year. Last Friday, Mrs. Obama was presented with the Official White House Christmas Tree, and the 19-foot-tall Balsam Fir, grown in Wisconsin, will be placed in the Blue Room, and decorated with a theme honoring Blue Star families. A special Gold Star Christmas tree decorated by Gold Star families will be displayed at the visitor’s entrance on the East Wing Landing. As many as 100,000 visitors will view the White House holiday decorations in the next month, according to an aide.

In 2009, Mrs. Obama's first holiday theme was "Reflect, Rejoice, Renew." In 2010, the theme was "Simple Gifts." Both themes were inspired in part by the First Lady's Kitchen Garden, and made liberal use of fruit and dried vegetables, woven among the more traditional greens.

*Top photo by Lawrence Jackson/White House; second by Eddie Gehman Kohan/ObamaFoodorama.com

2011 Obama White House Thanksgiving Menu

First Family's feast includes turkey, ham, oyster & cornbread stuffing, five sides, and six kinds of pie...
President Obama and the First Family are celebrating Thanksgiving in the White House with a traditional menu starring turkey and six different kinds of pie, including Pumpkin Pie and Banana Cream Pie.  The Obamas will share their Thanksgiving with unidentified “friends, family and staff,” according to the White House.  The feast will be created with bounty from First Lady Obama's Kitchen Garden, according to assistant chef Sam Kass. Honey from the White House Beehive will also be used for the dishes. (Above: At Wednesday's Turkey Pardoning Ceremony, Malia pets Liberty as the President and Sasha look on)

"Like millions of Americans, Michelle, Malia, Sasha and I will spend the day eating great food, watching a little football, and reflecting on how truly lucky we truly are," President Obama said today.

In addition to turkey, the Thanksgiving table will be laden with ham, two kinds of stuffing, five side dishes including macaroni and cheese and green bean casserole, and dinner rolls. The show-stopping pies also include Apple, Cherry, Huckleberry, Sweet Potato, and Pumpkin. The President is a fanatic for pie, and Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses has said that Banana Cream Pie is his favorite.  Yosses' Apple Pie recipe is here.

2011 Obama Family White House Thanksgiving Menu

Turkey
Ham

Cornbread Stuffing
Oyster Stuffing

Side Dishes
Greens
Sweet Potatoes
Mashed Potatoes
Green Bean Casserole
Macaroni and Cheese

Dinner Rolls

Dessert
Apple Pie
Pumpkin Pie
Sweet Potato Pie
Banana Cream Pie
Cherry Pie
Huckleberry Pie

Like many Americans, the First Family enjoys the same Thanksgiving menu each year, and the 2011 menu is identical to the the 2010 menu the White House issued, as well as to the 2009 menu, minus the words "honey baked" in front of "ham."

In an annual Thanksgiving tradition, President Obama made calls to US military service members this morning, at around 9:00 AM ET from the Oval Office. The President's weekly address also thanked the troops, and today Mrs. Obama sent out an e-mail asking Americans to join the Joining Forces/USO "Thanks From Everywhere" campaign. (Above: The President made his calls to troops from the Oval Office)

On Wednesday morning, President Obama granted a Thanksgiving pardon to turkey Liberty and his alternate Peace during the annual White House ceremony. In the afternoon, the First Family packed holiday grocery bags at a local food bank.

President Obama's Thanksgiving address:



*Top photo by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama; second by Pete Souza/White House. National Turkey Federation Chairman Ricard Huisinga is in the Pardon Ceremony in the photo at top.