Cake Boss Essays

  • Buddy: Bartolo Jr. Valastro from Carlo's Bakery

    572 Words  | 2 Pages

    baker at Carlo’s Bakery, where he was born into the business owned and operated by his parents. He is the master baker, cake decorator and star of the hit TLC series Cake Boss. Buddy followed in the footsteps of his father, who followed his father, and so on. His dad is his inspiration when it comes to making cakes for all of the people that come to bakery. The Cake Boss himself and the bakery became famous when Buddy was invited to participate on Food Network Challenge in 2004. He lost, but

  • Pastry Chef who I admire

    631 Words  | 2 Pages

    because he makes this dessert since he was a kid, and it always reminds him of his family and how important they are to him (Ramos, 2014). Actually, his biggest inspiration in his career is “Buddy Valastro”, well known by his television program “Cake Boss”. “I think he is such a wonderful pastry chef and he has so much to give to every student that is pursuing a career in pastry arts because he loves what he does and also, he’s always very creative. So that’s why he is my biggest inspiration (Ramos

  • Cake Decorating: Homemade or Store Bought?

    696 Words  | 2 Pages

    reasons to need a cake; from birthdays to weddings and everything in-between. When a cake is needed; the first question I ask myself is, do I make it or go to the store? Sometimes we order a cake when we need one; pre-made and decorated. Other times we make them and their decorations. Depending on the circumstances in which the cake is needed one of the choices may work more effectively. How does someone know to buy or make a cake? There is a lot to consider when choosing to make a cake with love or

  • Essay On Cake Decorating

    726 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cake decorating is a famous work of art today. I chose this because my aunt is a cake decorator and I have seen the work she has done, and I am very impressed. The well-known cake decorator today is Buddy Valastro, from Cake Boss. It is art because it’s a way people can express themselves. The purpose is to make cakes for people upon their request. It gives you a sense of satisfaction when you look at it. There are lots of different tools needed depending on the type of cake you’re doing. For a basic

  • Reflection On Their Eyes Were Watching God

    1470 Words  | 3 Pages

    while-vs.-black world. It is not until Janie matures and gets a life of her own that she realizes this. As the story progresses, there is more of this racial tension, especially towards the end of the novel. After a hurricane overtook Janie and Tea Cakes current home in the Everglades, they arrive at a town of only whites and others who previously arrived there also attempting to

  • the art of baking

    1079 Words  | 3 Pages

    didn't have a place to do it; or any idea what what i wanted to do with that. So i decided to try doing the baking and pastry arts. i thought to myself that, well i've always love to bake, and maybe i could possibly apply my ceramics skills to the cake making process. I had tried emailing many different companies to see if i could possibly intern with them, with no luck. instead i ended up with an angry letter from a bakery, and a bunch of “we already have an intern, im sorry.” But i wasn't going

  • Janie's Quest in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    Finding one’s soul mate is a difficult and lengthy process for most, as it is for Janie in the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston. She marries Logan Killicks, Joe Starks, and Tea Cake Woods who seem to be alike; however, the motives for the actions they each take are completely different. All three husbands are similar in the way that they all have expectations of Janie as a wife. Logan Killicks, Janies first husband, has expectations of Janie. His motives for his expectations

  • Analysis Of Cupcake

    1065 Words  | 3 Pages

    functions. We also target the online customers and provide best quality at better price. New strategist publications 2010 suggest that married couples with children are the biggest customers in this market, who spend 20% to 40% of household income on cake and cupcakes. Our target customers are women and persons who love eating sweets. • Price should be average so that medium segments are also able to purchase our products. • Customer services are also keep in mind so they every customer is satisfied

  • Investigation of Falling Cake Cases

    2155 Words  | 5 Pages

    Investigation of Falling Cake Cases Planning and Introduction: To begin I will explain the term terminal velocity. Terminal velocity is the maximum speed that a given fallen object can obtain. Terminal velocity is obtained in this way; when an object first starts falling, it accelerates for some while after starting. Eventually the force upwards due to the air flowing over the objects body is equal to the weight acting downwards, and it no longer accelerates. We can also obtain by

  • Room 101 Persuasive Speech

    551 Words  | 2 Pages

    She tells me, This is how you make chocolate cake from scratch. No, don’t crush the egg because then you’ll get shells in the batter. Don’t forget to clean the lint out of the dryer before putting in the next load so it doesn’t start a fire. Make sure towels and sheets are washed in hot water. She informs me, Oh you’re a woman now! Hurry and run that under cold water so the stain doesn’t set. You should wear black heels with that dress. You can make the dessert. She reminds me, Don’t burp in public

  • The Typally Duty Of A Pastry Chef By Kate Cooker

    1832 Words  | 4 Pages

    I started making desserts as a hobby later I deicided to turn it into a career. This paper will talk about what it is like as a pastry chef. This paper will include parts of an interview with exceitive pastry chef Kate Richter. She works in Sarah’s cake shop located in Chesterfield. Also this paper will also talk about the difference is between a baker and a pastry chef. And What is the typally duty of a pastry? What takes to become a pastry chef? All these questions and more and will be explored

  • Six Pitfalls Case Study

    1407 Words  | 3 Pages

    According to Elkstrand (2012), “Good leaders must learn to handle the mistakes that they make. Making mistakes should be seen as a form of learning – they are synonymous with growth and progress. If you haven’t failed, you aren’t trying very hard. Mistakes should simply be catalysts that encourage greater growth” (Elkstrand, 2012). In this paper I will talk about the six pitfalls and provide examples for these pitfalls. Failing to Respond to Employees Emails According to Comaford (2013), the first

  • Logan, Jody, and Tea Cake in Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God

    1955 Words  | 4 Pages

    Falk. Vol.61.). A young lady and her relationships with three guys. Over her life time she experiences love, hurt, and pain in the three relationships. Logan her first husband was way older than her. Jody dies at the end of their relationship. Tea Cake was the love of her life made her feel like she was more than just a house wife until he got bit by a wild dog. When Zora Hurston wrote this novel, she wanted to explain how a young women search for her own identity. This young woman would go through

  • Power

    1238 Words  | 3 Pages

    disgraced their family and/or community. A name is very significant because it gives a person a sense of who they are, an identity. In “No Name Woman”, Kingston’s aunt had no identity except for the story her mother told her and in “Mary” Marguerite’s new boss, Mrs. Cullinan changed her name to Mary which then, in a way, removed Marguerite’s original identity and gave her a new one, one she didn’t want. By changing Marguerite’s name, Mrs. Cullinan proves how much power she has over a little black servant

  • Recipe for Stroganoff

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    cans of Cream of Mushroom soup. A low fat version can be made by substituting water for any of the above (except the beer). Though the instructions on the frozen bread suggest four to six hours of gentle thawing, I recommend you show it who is boss around here and don't pull it out of the freezer until about an hour before you're going to eat it. Grease the thing with butter until it feels like a slippery brick and stick it in a bread pan. Put a towel over the top because you have seen other

  • MBA Admissions Essays

    572 Words  | 2 Pages

    assistant. While this was by no means my dream job, I learned a tremendous amount about business, and I gained useful exposure to the world of finance. Unfortunately, the company hit a period of instability, and after ten months I transferred with my boss to Coleman & Company. Thirteen months later, that company also began to fail, and I began to search for another path to advancement. With two strikes against me, I hit a home run and was hired by Sanford Bernstein into a challenging job with limitless

  • Identity in Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar

    1633 Words  | 4 Pages

    possibilities regarding her future aspirations. Although she is an extremely perceptive and bright woman, Esther has no sense of imminent direction, and instead imagines herself becoming and achieving an abundance of successes simultaneously. Upon meeting her boss, Jay Cee, Esther is immediately impressed with her flourishing balance of a career and marriage, and begins to imagine herself attaining similar achievements: "I tried to imagine what it would be like if I were Cee...Cee, the famous editor,

  • The Character of Moth in Love's Labor's Lost

    1215 Words  | 3 Pages

    integrity to show how true intellect comes from understanding people and not through scholarly displays. Moth, for the most part, gets the better of his fellow characters, especially the educated ones. In the initial conversation between Moth and his boss, Armado, the page's first reply to Armado's question shows common sense. Moth responds that a "great sign" (1.2.3) of melancholy is sadness. This statement, too simple for Armado to understand, both mocks and uses rhetoric. Moth defines a sad face

  • James Joyce's Dubliners - Anger and Misery in Counterparts

    955 Words  | 2 Pages

    through generations. Joyce introduces us to a character that at first is mildly amusing. Farrington is a working-class man that, like so many others, has to put up with verbal abuse from his boss. At first it is comical to watch him outline his speech he will give to his friends about how he wittily insulted his boss. However, we soon learn that he is a very angry man with rage dangerously building up with no acceptable outlet. Where the anger stems from is very important. As we learn he has no power

  • Is the Body Ownable

    2167 Words  | 5 Pages

    vs. “properties”, different senses of “mine”, etc.). Mine We will begin with the seemingly innocuous assertion, “my body is mine”. 1[1]This is a truism only if “mine” is not construed as “being that which I own”. I do not own my mother, my boss, or my sneeze. In some cases, “mine” only means that something pertains to me, not that it necessarily belongs to me in the sense in which a product of my labour might. Surely a slave who says, “my master,” is not trying to reverse the relationship