Coconut biscuit, raspberry jam, and marshmallow. Those three together are the key to a treat to make you smile. Looks adorable, tastes amazing… What’s not to like? Well, if you are not fond of coconut, make a plain biscuit, it will still be wonderful. I cannot share the exact recipe I used, because it is part of Savour Cooking School, but similar recipes can be found online. Like this one.
I’ve been a member of Savour for a long time. In fact, I joined just a couple of months after they launched the site. Kirsten Tibballs – pure royalty in the Australian Patisserie World – is the founder and the major engine behind the school. Classes are super detailed, and divided in “beginner, intermediate, and advanced levels”. I will not lie to you, the beginner level can be quite involved, and the advanced a sure ticket to hyperventilation and despair. But of course, totally worth it! Even if I don’t bake a lot of the things they teach, I learn a lot by watching the videos. If you’d like to join, visit the site with a click here. I cannot share their recipes, but today I show you three bakes I’ve made following Kirsten’s classes.
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RASPBERRY VOVO
These are just outstanding. Reading about them, it turns out that there are two versions, one from Australia, one from Ireland (called Mikado). The Australian version uses fondant and the Irish calls for marshmallow, which is what Kirsten taught in class. You can read more about it here. I find it intriguing that the name (vovo) means “grandpa” in Portuguese, but could not quite find the origin of the name in Australia. The recipe starts with baking some coconut shortbread, then making raspberry jam, and the delicious raspberry marshmallow that gets piped at the edges. A little warm knife is the secret to get the marshmallow cut nicely in between the cookies. Some of the steps are shown below…
Recently Kirsten launched a challenge, picking one recipe from the hundreds available and asking members to make it and share the pictures. I participated of two of these monthly challenges.
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DULCE ROCHER
These are considered “beginner” level at Savour. You will make a shortbread cookie, a whipped caramel for the filling, sugar-coated hazelnuts for the coating, and finally temper some milk chocolate. I loved making these but a word of caution: since each cookie will be coated in chocolate/nuts, make sure they are rolled thin to start with, or you will end up with a massive sandwich cookie. Finesse matters here! Some of the steps are shown below…
Can you imagine the taste of all that caramel plus the cookie, chocolate, and the crunch of the sugared hazelnuts? It is a dream in cookie shape! Lots of members participated of the challenge, the person who won made them super cute in square shape, she really deserved the prize (in that case it was quite a bit of high quality chocolate, and, yes, I would have loved to be the winner!).
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STRAWBERRY AND CREAM CHOUX BUNS
If you can believe it, this is also considered beginner level (cough, cough). Components to make these beauties: choux buns with a craquelin coating, strawberry compote, cinnamon crumble, and white chocolate chantilly. The result is totally worth the work, trust me. Since they are too messy to donate to the homeless, I took them to our department and well, let’s say there were a bunch of super happy Professors and graduate students. Mission accomplished!
If you like to take your baking up several notches, I highly recommend joining Savour (click here). Plus there is a nice community online through their Facebook page, where you can see what everyone else is baking, and share kitchen adventures.
ONE YEAR AGO: Egyptian Goulash
TWO YEARS AGO: Steamed Chicken with Black Bean Sauce
THREE YEARS AGO: Ginger-Dill Salmon
FOUR YEARS AGO: Eleven Years, Time for Goodbye
FIVE YEARS AGO: Salmon Tacos
SIX YEARS AGO: A Dream that did not come true
SEVEN YEARS AGO: Kaleidoscopic Macarons
EIGHT YEARS AGO: Zucchini Noodles with Sun-dried Tomato Pesto
NINE YEARS AGO: In My Kitchen, July 2015
TEN YEARS AGO: Sous-vide Pork Chops with Roasted Poblano Butter
ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Roasted Strawberry-Buttermilk Sherbet
TWELVE YEARS AGO: Amazing Ribs for the 4th of July!
THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Baby Back Ribs on the 4th of July
FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Blueberry Muffins
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: A Pie for your 4th of July









Wow, Sally. Everything is beautiful. I’m familiar with Kirstin’s work. I looked into joining something (can’t remember exactly what) online in the past, but it was terribly expensive, and I didn’t have the time to commit to it, so I passed. I think it had something to do with chocolate. The program you joined is much more reasonable. I may do it. Your bakes are beautiful and you did a great job. You had me at ‘whipped caramel’. That made my mouth drool a little bit. 😉
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Knowing your work, I think Savour is perfect for you – you will find stuff that is challenging, but I think for you most will be a walk at the park – and there are HUNDREDS of videos. Hundreds. From chocolate bonbons to tarts, even some bread (sourdough). Entremets…. real nice stuff!
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I receive the e-mails from Savour but I’ve never leapt to sign up because each recipe snipet I look at looks like something “unuseful” to bake. But what you just showed it 100% “useful” – you know I have no use to make a wedding cake entrement but foo-foo cookies for a fun occasion is up my ally. Do you have access for a limited period of time to the recipes, because I know they introduce 1 month (from what I’ve seen)? Are you allowed access to recipes that were there before you signed up?
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Yes, you get access to EVERYTHING the hundreds and hundreds of videos and downloads… so you could browse for a month and get the tutorials you want, download the recipes, etc. You can only watch the videos while your membership lasts…
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They’re all amazing, they all deserve a post each!! 🤩🤩🤩
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well, if I could share the recipes, I would devote a post to each, but since they are off-limits… ;-(
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