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People | 21 Jun 2023 | By Sun International

Time Square chef rocks SA pastry champs

Time Square’s chef de partie Cynthia Bombe. | Photo by Sun International

Time Square’s chef de partie Cynthia Bombe, along with student Lorna Biyana, took the honours in The 2023 South African Chefs Association’s Pastry Championship Competition.

The challenge of being paired with a stranger and given a few hours to create not one, but three top-class confectionary items was no deterrent for Time Square’s chef de partie Cynthia Bombe, who together with culinary student Lorna Biyana, swept their rivals in the The 2023 South African Chefs Association’s Pastry Championship Competition.

Bombe and Biyana met the day before the competition and had to decide what they were going to prepare and start baking. Their winning efforts – which saw them earn a 93 percent total – saw them plating three desserts for each of the three rounds, beating three other teams to share a prize of R20 000.

“The experience was fun, but it was hard to work with someone you haven’t met before,” Bombe said. “I have been with Time Square since 2017, while Lorna is a first-year student at the Johannesburg Culinary Institute. I took the lead using my industry experience, and we had to trust each other and our strengths. Our desserts were amazing.”

The pair created a ruby chocolate dome, with an almond fill on the top and a raspberry compote inside. “We also had raspberry gel and vanilla mousse, with a sable biscuit base, and I sprayed the outside of the chocolate dome for a different texture.”

Cooking up a storm

For the second round, where participants had to create magic using passion fruit, the two pastry chefs made an entremet cake, composed of multiple layers of cake, mousse and jelly. The third round’s challenge was to create a friandise, a small, after-dinner treat – possibly a candy or a cake.

Bombe said she would be spending part of her prize money on a spa massage to relax after all her efforts.

“After that, I will buy equipment like a stand mixer to allow me to create and bake more in my personal capacity.” The 27-year-old runs the Facebook page Oven Time with Chef Bombe, making content in her spare time and selling cakes and pastries.

“When I was a child growing up in Diepkloof, Soweto, I used to help my mum bake scones and jam tarts, which she sold. That is where my passion for baking comes from, and I decided to pursue it as a career.” Bombe holds a Chef’s Certificate in Food Preparation from the HTA School of Culinary Art.

Time Square inspiration

“I’ve been a pastry chef for the past six years. I love pastry, it is my passion. I didn’t have any experience when I joined Time Square, I had to adapt and fell in love with it. You have to be patient working in this part of the kitchen.”

Bombe paid tribute to Time Square’s Executive Chef Nonkosi Vellem, “who showed me almost everything I know”. Today, Bombe is a supervisor, working with banqueting, sometimes preparing up to 1 000 plates at a time. “I oversee functions, making sure the food is out on time and that there are no complaints. I have to delegate to the junior chefs and also manage orders to ensure stock continuity.”

Chefs work long hours, including weekends, and for this reason, Bombe’s two-year-old son Oatlegile lives in Soweto with her mother.

“My dream is to one day have my own pastry school. I would love to travel the world to work in countries where culinary talents are more widely celebrated.” Bombe also aspires to open an eponymous patisserie.

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