Posted on Leave a comment

Gem of a French Bread: Fougasse from Fournée Bakery

One thing I’ve noticed after moving up to NorCal is that bakeries here are infinitely better than the ones in SoCal. What I mean is, bakeries in the Bay feel more authentic and artisanal, and often times they are. I think there are better options for bread here than in the south. Please correct me in the comments below if I’m mistaken, but I can’t think of SoCal equivalents to The CheeseBoard Collective Bakery, The Acme Bread Company, Arsicault Bakery, and Tartine Bakery (spots all deserving separate posts of their own!)

Anyways, this post is solely on Fournée Bakery in Berkeley, CA – and the gem of a French bread they make: fougasse.

Front entrance of Fournée Bakery

Fournée Bakery

The Claremont Club & Spa that you see outside the bakery.

Facing the tennis courts of the historic Claremont Club & Spa, Fournée Bakery is located in the small cluster of restaurants and stores at the intersection of Claremont Ave, Russell St, Domingo Ave and Ashby Ave. Its neighbors include Peet’s Coffee, Tulipan Floral, and Rick & Ann’s.

Fournée Bakery and its neighbors.

On a busy day, the line can go all the way down almost to Rick & Ann’s! As you can see in the photo above, there are some parking spots with meters. But this area can get crowded as this area is shared by other restaurants and stores, along with guests and visitors from the Claremont hotel and its tennis courts.

Bread Galore!

Baked goods at Fournée.

Fournée Bakery offers an array of delectable baked goods, including morning buns, scones (fruit, walnut & coriander), croissants (fruit, veggie, chocolate almond, almond, traditional butter, egg & ham, ham & manchego cheese), cheese rolls, pains au chocolat, pains au raisin (says it’s “pain aux raisins” online), and this marvelous French bread called, “gougère” that I fell in love with! It’s this savory puff of a bread that tastes like cheese and egg. Simply delicious!

They also have these sandwiches that seem to be popular amongst visitors. I always see at least one person in front of me order one. I haven’t tried them still, as I’ve already developed my go-to items and always end up ordering them instead. I’ll have to try them soon!

But I did try their Farmer’s Bread and can say with confidence that it’s good!

Pastries Galore!

I sure can’t forget to mention Fournée Bakery’s excellent pastries!

The pastries behind the glass display vary from day to day, but the selection usually consists of Meyer lemon shortbreads, cookies, brownies, and quiches. Often times, they have these seasonal items – I HIGHLY recommend that you get them. I don’t remember regretting getting their seasonal items, like ever! Some seasonal items that I’ve seen include seasonal fruit scones, bûche de Noël (during Christmastime), fruit tart, and my favorite, the rhubarb tart. I fell hard for it last summer and am currently waiting for it to come out again.

The rhubarb tart that I fell for. I didn’t know how delicious a plant could taste in a tart!
Oh…How I miss the taste of the sweet, fruity, cool crunchy bite of Fournée’s rhubarb tart! 💗

The Gem of a Bread: Fougasse

Yet, the item that truly, truly shines the brightest of ’em all at Fournée is fougasse. You may ask – what is “fougasse”? Pronounced “fu-gas,” it’s a bread from Provence, France that’s shaped like a flat leaf. Per online sources, it’s related to the focaccia of Italy, hogaza of Spain, fogassa of Catalonia, fügassa of Liguria, pogača of the Balkans, and pogácsa of Hungary.

Fougasse from Fournée. It’s huge!

Until Fournée, I had never heard or seen of a fougasse. And even to this day, I don’t see fougasse often in other places in the Bay. So when I first laid my eyes on fougasse with its ingredients listed as in the photo below, I had to try it. I mean, it was a bread made with duck fat!

Ordering the strange bread called, “fougasse” was one of the best decisions I made last year. No joke – the first bite was heavenly: a harmonious blend of salty and savory, with just the right amount of the perfect seasoning.

Ever since that fateful day, I’ve shared fougasse with everyone around me, including my sister who also fell in love with the beautiful French bread. I became Fournée Bakery’s unofficial patron & ambassador of fougasse, visiting the bakery almost every week for it and spreading news of its exceptional taste to everyone I meet.

Conclusion

To tell the truth, I thought about gatekeeping Fournée Bakery and its gem of a bread, fougasse. But it’s too good of a spot to keep to oneself, and besides, it’s already well-loved by its frequent visitors and fans like me!

On a final note, not only is the bakery stocked with delectable bread and pastries, but also, they’ve got a nice seating area to enjoy: in front of/behind Peet’s and Tulipan Floral.

Taking a sip of Peet’s and admiring the flowers of Tulipan while taking a bite of Fournée’s gems is such bliss! 😊

P.S. Note: Fournée Bakery is closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. For hours and other info, visit their website HERE or their IG account HERE.

P.P.S. FYI, the front window of Fournée is under renovation. I think I overheard someone say that a car had crashed into the store front or something. So be aware that the front of the bakery will look slightly different!

P.P.P.S. IMPORTANT UPDATE: Fougasse is currently unavailable! ☹ The bakery staff told me that they don’t have the duck fat to make them and they don’t know when they’ll have their duck fat again…

Update 1/27/24: Fougasse is back, baby! 🙌


Posted on Leave a comment

Rendez Vous Cafe in Corona Del Mar: Best Beignets, Worst Latte 🥐

If someone had asked me where my favorite café was just three months ago, I would have readily answered: Rendez Vous French Bakery & Cafe in Corona Del Mar, CA! But now I can’t. Because despite their still delicious beignets and food, it saddens me to say that I’ve tasted one of the worst lattes there.

So let’s talk about Rendez Vous Cafe.

Heavenly Beginning

Rendez Vous French Bakery and Cafe is an “authentic artisan French bakery” and café where “everything is made from scratch” with the best ingredients. They serve breakfast, brunch, lunch, and dinner and offer catering.

The restaurant/café banner outside.

I chanced upon this café when I was driving by Corona Del Mar one day. It has an eye-catching aesthetic exterior, with a blue and white sign and outdoor seating area adorned with garlands of pink florals.

The lovely exterior of Rendez Vous.

When you walk inside, you come face to face with lovely Parisian decorations, including this beautiful wall of pink, white, red, and purple roses and a chic white cart displaying macarons and caneles:

Quelles jolies roses! 🌹🌹🌹 *Click HERE for another aesthetic café that abounds with roses.

Not to mention the tempting pastries and bread surrounding you when you stand at the cashier to order!

The first time I visited with my family, I ordered a French toast, veggie panini, cream filled beignets, and two cups of latte. And we remember it like it was yesterday: it was HEAVENLY. Everything tasted great – not too sweet, not too salty. Fluffy French toast with fresh fruits, flavorful panini packed with cooked vegetables and side salad, doughnut-like beignets packed with rich cream, and foamy, rich lattes.

I wish we had taken photos that day, but we were too busy devouring the food. Click HERE to see the official photos of their French toast and HERE for their cream beignets.

*Visit their IG page for more mouthwatering photos of their menu items💕💕

The heavenly taste continued every week we visited the café, and for the past few months, visiting Rendez Vous was our family’s little ritual. We would order, take the food and lattes, and watch the beautiful shores of Corona Del Mar:

The Ever-Changing Quality

But sometime around late March, things began to change. We were surprised to find our beloved Rendez Vous French toast, which had been fluffy and yellow, coming out too burnt to eat. Our lattes had become foamless and tasteless.

But we loved the cafe so much that we went back week after week, in hopes of tasting the gastronomical heaven we had experienced in the beginning. But the French toast always came out with black bits on the bottom, some weeks worse than others, while our lattes tasted different every week. *Sometimes, it would be like drinking hot water and espresso separately. Other times, it was like drinking lukewarm milk and espresso. Our lattes always came out with barely any foam, and the milk and espresso that should blend together came out tasting like they hadn’t been mixed.

*5/29 Update: Delicious foamy lattes are back!

How the latte was on 5/29/22. 👍

And at times we would come home with the cream beignets only to discover that we received plain ones. 🙁

Photo by Matthew Henry.

After weeks of giving the French toast and lattes multiple second chances, we gave up on our favorite items. So we had no choice but to find quality lattes elsewhere, which we did at Rose Bakery Café a few blocks away.

Food’s Still Great Though 👍

But I’m happy to share that they always have great beignets and paninis.

And croque madame!

I’ve also tasted some of their pastries, including the fruit tart and pear almond tart. And they’re as good as they look! 👇😉👍

And the café is as chic as ever, with pink roses and decorations reminiscent of Paris itself. They’ve got great food and lovely, friendly employees. I recommend Rendez Vous Café to anyone visiting Corona Del Mar, CA but just be aware of their French toast and latte.

⚠ The French toast might come out very burnt on the bottom, and the latte might come out tasteless & foamless. Hopefully they go back to tasting phenomenal!

To wrap up, here are more photos of the chic interior & exterior:

Here’s the exact location:

P.S. To visit the cafe’s official website, click HERE. Like their motto, they really do have real food and real people! 😉

P.P.S. During Christmas, this pretty French café becomes even more aesthetic with a pink Christmas tree!

Pink boxes, ornaments, and roses galore!

P.P.P.S. Update 5/24: I visited again and ordered a panini with cream beignets for take out. The panini was delicious as always, but I was given plain beignets again… 😔


Posted on Leave a comment

Irvine French Baking Class #2: Apple Pie & Tarte Tatin

After attending the fun lemon tart class I attended last year, I signed up for the “Apple Pie and Tatin Tart” class when it opened a few months back. Despite registering early for the Irvine baking class, I almost decided to withdraw the night before. After months of hectic schedule, I didn’t think I could show up on a Wednesday night to bake from 7PM to 9:30 PM. Just the thought of it exhausted me.

However, I simply could not miss out on another opportunity to learn French baking from a French instructor. And I’m so glad that I didn’t! 😉

Snapshot of the baking classes offered by the city of Irvine.
The OC French baking class hosted by the city of Irvine is really popular so spaces fill up quickly.
Early registration is recommended!

Before the Baking

Just like last time, the class was taught by instructor Sylvie Roux at the Irvine Fine Arts Center. The center has a studio with an oven and kitchen, and participants simply have to show up on the designated day and time wearing closed-toe shoes and a $10 ingredients and tolls fee.

The studio where the class was held. The kitchen with a fridge (shown above) & oven (not shown) and all the ingredients prepared on the front table.

*The ingredients fee is separate from the class fee, which was $47 (around $50 with convenience fee). We were told to pay the ingredients fee in cash, in check or via Venmo only (no credit card).

We were also told via email that we could bring small or medium containers to bring home our pastries. (From my experience, it’s best to bring a large/wide container that can hold pie-shaped pastries. Both the lemon tart and apple pie + tatin tart were baked in round shapes.)

Apple Pie

Baking supplies & recipes placed in front of each seat around the main table.

Led by our instructor and her assistant, us twelve participants sat around a large table and worked in groups of 3~5 to create both the apple pie and tarte tatin. We started off with the pie and tart dough, mixing the ingredients together in a food processor. Since we worked in groups, sometimes watching was all you could do while others did the work. But I think watching others bake helps you learn as well.

After creating the batter, we each got a small batch to place inside our given pie molds. While we preheated the pie dough in the oven, we moved on to the highlight of the apple pie/tatin tart: 🍎

Apples Galore

Photo by Shelley Pauls.

Each of us were given a single Gala apple to peel with an apple peeling machine. It was my first time using an apple peeler/corer/slicer, and I must say it does wonders!

Since there was only one apple peeling machine, us participants each took turn peeling our Gala apples. Then, we further cut the beautifully peeled apples into smaller bits and pieces to place on top of the preheated dough.

As for the finishing touch, we sprinkled whipping cream + egg + sugar preparation on top before completely baking our pies in the oven.

Waiting for the apple pie to bake…
Apple pie ready to go! 🍎🥧

Tarte Tatin

As inexperienced as I am in French baking, I thought that “apple tatin tart” and “apple pie” were similar, i.e. interchangeable. So I thought we were making apple tart for this class. But I learned that tarte tatin is completely different and we were making BOTH the apple pie and apple tatin tart.

First of all, tatin tart has caramel in it. Our instructor taught us how to make caramels, and to our surprise, caramels are nothing but heated sugar!

Secondly, to make a tarte tatin, you pour the caramel on the bottom of the mold, put in the sliced apples, cover it with the dough, and then flip over the tart once baked. With apple pies, you put the dough then the apples, but with tarte tatin, you put the caramel and the apples then the dough.

Pouring the caramel first inside the mold.

Tarte tatin being baked.

The final step: flipping over the baked apple tarte tatin! Our instructor advised us to be extra careful in this step as the caramel was very hot. 🔥

Takeaways

My second French baking class taught by instructor Sylvie Roux was as informative and fun as my first one. She handed us her recipes for both the French apple pie and apple tatin tarte, which are authentic French recipes from her family with her own tips. And after class, we each left with one small apple pie and one small apple tatin tart.

Apple pie (left) and apple tarte tatin (right). Both tasted really good!

The OC French baking classes offered by the city of Irvine are great ways to explore French pastries as well as opportunities to work in a collaborative environment with fellow beginner bakers. They’re wonderful in that you get to learn French baking from a French instructor without overly expensive fees/tuition or the need to travel to France.

If you dream of baking but don’t know where to start, I recommend OC French cooking classes!

🍎Link to OC French Baking Class Instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/frenchcookingoc/

🍎Link to Irvine classes taught by instructor Sylvie Roux: https://secure.yourirvine.org/CA/city-of-irvine/catalog

🍋To read about the lemon tart class I took last year, click HERE.

P.S. I tried to recreate the French apple pie by myself over the weekend, and it turned out pretty successful!

As even I, a complete beginner, can now bake French apple pie and lemon tart by myself, the classes are totally effective! 👍