RETURNING TO CITI FIELD   
 Queens Bakery Farine Creates a Delicious Viral Sensation with South Asian Fusion Desserts 
 After he introduced it two weeks ago, Chef Michael Mignano couldn’t keep his gulan  
 jamun cheesecake in stock.  
 COURIER LIFE, NOV. 22-28, 2019 41  
 THIS WINTER 
 theworldsfare.nyc 
 Farine Creates a Delicious Viral Sensation with  
 South Asian Fusion Desserts  
 BY JOE DISTEFANO 
 As the Culinary King of Queens, I’m so  
 very fortunate to live in the most diverse  
 and delicious destination in all of New York  
 City. Really I’m not royalty though, I’m  
 an ambassador, and a hungry one at that.  
 Today, we examine an only in Queens dessert  
 sensation, a fusion of South Asian sweets and  
 classic American desserts as envisioned by  
 a classically trained French pastry chef who  
 hails from the World’s Borough.     
 There are dozens and dozens of South Asian  
 sweets to be had in the teashops and cafes of Jackson  
 Heights, from blocks of fudgy Indian chum chum in  
 day-glo orange and green and grainy laddoo to red  
 sugar-syrup soaked Bangladeshi kalojam, but there  
 are no South Asian sweets quite like those made by  
 Chef Michael Mignano at Farine Baking Company.  
 The Sicilian-American pastry wizard recently  
 introduced a pair of confections that combine South  
 Asian sweets with classic American desserts: a  
 cheesecake with an Indian flourish and cupcake with  
 a Bangladeshi accent. 
 The gulab jamun cheesecake came first, about  
 two weeks ago, when the former pastry chef of The  
 Pierre Hotel reprised a sweet treat he used to make  
 at the hotel for Indian weddings. At the hotel it was  
 served in individual cups, with the sweet cheese  
 ball hidden at the bottom. At the bakery Mignano  
 showcases the gulab jamun. Each slice sports a  
 cross-section of two gulub jamun. Another of  
 the golden brown orbs—topped with gulkand, or  
 candied rose petals—crowns the whole slice. The  
 cheesecake itself, flavored with cardamom and a  
 hint of rosewater, sits atop a graham cracker crust.  
 It eats like a South Asian version of a classic New  
 York cheesecake, but really it’s the first ever Jackson  
 Heights cheesecake.  
 “When I posted it on  
 Instagram on Saturday it went  
 viral with a lot of my South  
 Asian followers,” says the chef  
 who’d whipped up four cakes  
 that proved to be insufficient  
 for the demand. “On Sunday  
 people were waiting on line at  
 7:30 in the morning like it was  
 a cronut.” 
 Young second generation  
 South Asian foodies pass by  
 colorful display cases of mithai  
 as they are known in Hindi or  
 mishti in Bangladeshi and it’s  
 almost like they’re a dessert  
 museum, Mignano points  
 out. By combining American  
 and South Asian sweets, the  
 former Iron Chef winner has  
 given the new generation an  
 exciting, delicious way to enjoy  
 treats that they previously  
 may have only associated with  
 their grandparents. “Adding  
 conventional Desi sweets to  
 conventional American confectionaries is the  
 new trend we never thought we needed,” wrote  
 Instagrammer @muslimfoodies, after trying the  
 cheesecake. 
 The second of Mignano’s South Asian fusion  
 creations takes two shopworn desserts—cupcakes  
 and pumpkin spice—and combines them with  
 Bangladeshi  confectionery to create a treat far  
 greater than the sum of its parts. With its hot  
 pink frosting scattered with almonds it looks  
 many other fancypants cupakes, but the Kalojam  
 Pumpkin Cupcake has a secret. Cut it open and  
 you’ll find a ruby red core of kalojam at the center  
 of the pumpkin cake. And that pink frosting? It’s  
 flavored with Rooh Afza, a syrup made with a  
 medicinalgourd, various herbs, and rosewater that  
 is reputed to have a cooling effect in hot South  
 Asian summers. As cupcakes are to American kids  
 so Roof Afzah is to Bangladeshi’s of a certain age  
 who have fond memories of drinking milk based  
 beverages made with the syrup. 
 “It’s like a Bangladeshi Shirley Temple, says  
 Mignano who gave the new cupcake to own of  
 his Bangladeshi servers without telling her what  
 flavor it was. “The look on her face when she bit it  
 into was priceless,” he recalls. “‘It tastes just like my  
 childhood,’ she said.”  
 This pumpkin cupcake has a delicious secret, a Bangladeshi  
 sweet inside, and a frosting made from Rooh Afza syrup. 
 	
 
 Address: 74-24 37th Ave, Jackson Heights 
 Phone: (718) 433-9830 
 Web site: www.farinebakingcompany.com/ 
 
				
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