Showing posts with label choux pastry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label choux pastry. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Chicken Farm Baker's Project # 40 : Play me please!!, Pâte à choux, Passionfruit Meringue Eclair

Halooooo, I am alive ! hehehehe. Had been so lazy updating the blog (also the suck internet)... Some of you may know that recently I am mad of making a good croissant at home...Yesterday was already my 8th attempt and I still haven't get it right. Whenever I succeed, I will post about it :)


Anyway, today is not about the croissant, its about Eclair ! The thing that sounds simple but hard to make it perfect. My ideal eclair is hollow and neatly puff up with a minimal crack. It is so frustrating if you end up with big cracks on the surface of the eclairs or other choux products which makes it difficult to glaze. (and I still got that crack -*-)

This is my first post of Chicken Farm Baker's Project, a group of people who love to bake (also to eat I think ^ ^) and this time... is about choux. I love making choux pastry since their versatility, you can make many different products out of it... profiteroles, crouquembouches, eclairs, St. Honore, etc.



I was thinking what to make...and I saw Adriano's new product from my friend's facebook, the lemon meringue eclair... ok, I wanna make that one. In my freezer, a bag of frozen passion fruit puree was sitting...

Passion fruit Meringue Eclairs
(inspired by Adriano Zumbo)

Passion fruit curd (recipe by Bacco Winebar Pasticceria)

160 g Passion fruit puree
48 g egg yolks
60 g eggs
48 g granulated sugar
60 g unsalted butter
2 g gelatin (bloomed)

Whisk together sugar, egg yolks and eggs in a bowl. Boil the puree and temper the egg mixture. Pour back into the pot and keep stirring with the wooden spoon until the mixture is a bit thicker (not so long about 2-3 mins and don't let it boil). Take off the heat, stir in gelatin and butter.

Transfer passion fruit curd to a bowl and chill, its surface covered with plastic wrap, until cold.


Vanilla pastry cream (recipe by Adriano Zumbo)

500 ml milk
125 g egg yolks
125 granulated sugar
50 g corn flour
50 g unsalted butter
1/2 vanilla bean

Place milk and vanilla bean in a saucepan. Heat gently until the milk boils, remove from the heat. Whisk the yolks, sugar and cornflour in a bowl until thick and pale. Gradually whisk in the milk. Return mixture to same saucepan and stir over medium heat until the custard boils. Spread over a tray to cool rapidly.

Cover the surface of the custard closely with plastic wrap to prevent a skin forming, at 55°C transfer to a bowl and stir through butter and refrigerate to cool completely


Passion fruit pastry cream

Mix the Passion fruit curd and pastry cream with 1 : 2 ratio

(these recipe, you will get more passion fruit cream as you needed, who cares... just use the rest spread on toast ^_^)



Pate a choux (recipe by Tiny Bakery)

50 g unsalted butter
75 g water
50 g milk
pinch of salt
pinch of sugar
75 g Cake flour (I used All purpose flour)
2 eggs

Preheat the oven to 200ºC . Lightly grease 2-3 large oven trays and set aside.

1. Combine the water, milk, sugar, salt and butter in a large heavy-based saucepan and bring to the boil. Remove from the heat and using a wooden spoon quickly beat in the flour. Return saucepan to the heat and continue beating until the mixture comes together and pulls away from the sides of the pan. Cook stirring over low heat for a further 1-2 minutes to cook out the flour. Remove from heat and allow to cool slightly.
2. Transfer to a large bowl. Using a hand mixer, beat the mixture to release any more heat. Gradually add the eggs, one at a time. Beat well between each addition until all the eggs have been added and the mixture is thick and glossy. Beat for a few more minutes, or until thickened.
3. Pipe the batter using a large plain or star tip on parchment lined sheet pans. Brush with egg wash lightly if desired.
4. Bake until the products are crisp when pressed on the sides about 35 minutes.
5. When cool, fill with Passion fruit pastry cream


Italian Meringue

150 g granulated sugar
52 g water
75 g egg white
pinch of salt

Cook the sugar and water until 118C (soft-ball stage). When the syrup reaches 110C, in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, beat the egg whites and salt on low speed until foamy. With the mixer running, slowly pour the hot sugar syrup into the egg whites, and beat on high speed until mixture has cooled. Use immediately.

Verdict : Taste-wise, I quite like it but in term of presentation, I think my eclair is too small compare to the meringue. I used St honore tube to pipe the meringue and found it too big. I should find some smaller tube next time :)



sorry guys, forgot to take picture of the filling :P

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

SP Lesson 1 - 3 : Petits Fours

This week we made some Petits Fours which are small oven baked goods. Some eclairs, puffs, swans, frangipane fruit tartlettes, marzipan filled fruits, petits fours glaces which are made from genoise.......all Mini !

Choux puffs by chef Keith, Fruit tartlettes by chef Herve.

From chef Herve....so colorful !

My mini choux pastries......

looks like Krispy Kreme lol

Swans...


Mini eclairs.

Mini fruits tartlettes....I think mine was too purple? should add some more red colour...but the strawberries we got were so huge !

just put in ur mouth !


Varieties of tartlettes from our class SP3


Marzipan filled fruit....some people don't like marzipan at all but I don't mind ^ ^


These one...when we saw chef was glazing the fondant on top of genoise....seems so easy...He finished 1 cake in 5 seconds but I spent like 3 minutes per each !


I like these color...so cute ! don't u think so? :D

All these little little things are so labour intensive work...that's why chef told us that normally the business charges for these more than normal size pastries.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

IP Lesson 19 - 20 : Croquembouche

One of an interesting lesson ...

Croquembouche is a traditional French dessert usually made as a wedding cake. The word ''Croquembouche'' translates to ''crack in the mouth'' due to the caramel/toffee finish. Profiteroles are stacked onto a shape like cone

French Croquembouches are profiteroles dipped in caramel and filled with creme patisserie. It’s base is made from Nougatine which we have to work with when it is still hot ! So bascially, the whole thing looks golden in colour. The Italians croquembouche use Chocolate to stick it together instead of caramel.

First day we just prepared the choux puff, pastry cream and nougatine...




Haha...even the leftover nougatine chef made...we still wanna eat !

The second day, Chef Karen was the one who assemble the croquembouche.


Profiteroles are dipped into caramel and stick to each other. Telling the truth, when I saw chef did that in the demo, I think it is pretty easy job. But !!! soooooo difficult ! The caramel is 160 degree celcius while the boiling water is just 100 degree...Can you imagine how hot it is? It is sooooooooooooo painful...Most of us burned ourself in the kitchen. ( I was the first one who burned myself...and I got 3 burnt !!!)

However, I was quite satisfied with my croquembouche...



Ah....until today I really want my mum to see that I can make so many things that I have never thought I will....

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Lesson 15 : Paris Brest

When we pronounce this name or we tell someone that..oh today i bake ''Paris Brest" ....I really want you guys to see thier faces...They like ''wat?''..hahaha...so funny...

Then I have to explain that'' It spells with B-r-e-s-t and is name of the city in the south of France... The origin of Paris Brest was named after a famous French cycling race from Paris to Brest.

The Paris-Brest is surprisingly simple to create. A ring of choux pastry is baked golden brown and then sliced in half for filling. Normally they use a praline (also called Mousseline) of almonds and sugar is ground up and added to vanilla pastry cream to make a sweet, nutty filling. But in our class, we use hazelnut...taste so like nutella! and ferrero rocher ..lol


Chef Micheal made a big Paris brest...

They are classically topped with sliced almonds and sometimes dusted with powdered sugar. Chef Michael tought us that we also can piped whipped cream on top on the paline....looks much nicer...


Small Paris Brest...like donut..isn't it?

Chef Michael told that because the paline is very rich,we can't eat too much......(it contains tons of butter ridiculously...425 g per 750 ml of milk...my gosh !)

We all won't believe him at first...like the small piece of paris brest (Donut size) Chef cut into 4 pieces...we were like..."come on ..chef..just 2 is fine.."hahaha...

I tasted one....soo rich...then ok..1 more...after i finish the 2nd ...OK !!..no more..can't any more........

Since the past 2 days making choux..i did a pretty good job...today i just try to make thing different...I saw chef Michael add more salt and sugar in water than i did...so this time i add more...

Also when I was making Panade, I was afraid about cook it too long..(dunno why have to afraid since i made it twice succesfully already)...So today i just cook my panade quicker.

Before i added eggs, I felt that my panade was quite wet ..After adding just 2-3 eggs (6 eggs in the recipe), I reckoned that today something different might happen to my choux...maybe today will be a perfect choux ..lol... but it's not !!! It was too runny...I put just 5 eggs then enough ... can't put anymore...Chef Michael said that.."Let's try baking it...Should be fine...No need to fix"


This was the tray of my Big Paris brest. Mine were the 2 dark at below...Su Jin were the top...

The problem were:

1. Someone turned off the oven when we put the choux inside..and chef just noticed about 25 mins later...he said during that time, the choux paste were dry out...when bake it, will not get a good product.

2. Mine were a bit darker than normal...cuz put too much sugar.

3. Since my panade was too runny...you can see the shape ^O^

Anyway, I think it looks nice...I told chef Michael ...This thing looks so rustic..(Meng said i am clever using that word..haha.. ) ..Chef Michael was like ...haaa...? He tasted it and said that ''It tasted like pancake and looked like pancake...Ok..we will open the Thai style pancake shop here" lol

Then everyone keep tasting my choux...haha....(I really like the taste of my choux today, it tasted better than what i made in the past 2 days)

Another tray of my Paris brest...looks better but still darker than everyone. Chef Michael gave a compliment to my piping and my parline (Su jin and I made Parline together)..He said.."At least it's one thing you did well today'' ..Um...Is it really a compliment? *giggling*


After decoration, it looks good, rite?


Lucky i did only 4 of Paris Brest...cuz don't wanna eat too much..even gave to some friends..still go left in my fridge !

Lesson 14 : Eclairs

Today we were making Eclairs....use same Choux paste with choux puff but just different shape and different filling...so we call it differently....Paste is piped into an oblong shape. Once cool, the pastry then is filled with a coffee- or chocolate-flavoured[1] pastry cream (crème pâtissière), custard or whipped cream, and topped with fondant icing of the same flavour as the filling.

Chef Karin told us that the best lenght for Eclairs is 12 cm...which Su hee, Meng and I all think that it is toooo long....(I think it looks ugly for that long though). Moveover, we have to do Eclairs for our assestment and present them in perfect criteria...12 cm long Eclairs filled with coffee pastry cream and finished wiht coffee fondant and served in paper cup....Su hee and I was thinking we will make only 10 - 11 cm long..hehe


Chef Karin is the most neat and effective chef in my idea...Her products always great in terms of quality and quantity...


Chef Karin's Coffee Eclairs.

She made in Profiterole shape and topped with caster sugar and almond....good idea...


Value added with chocolate piping on top !!!


I really need pratising my Piping skill...1st tray were too fat and 2nd tray were too thin... -_-'' and I think it looked like chinese donut ..lol

Eventhough in our class we don't need to make fondant from scratch, we just take it from the fondant tub and warm it to no more than 37 degrees..After you get the right consistency, you can put the flavour/colour you want....still, to make it the right consistency and right temperature was not easy for me...need more practise. My fondant was just a bit too runny...but chef Karin said..it will be fine...try first...

However, I was the first one in the class who presented Eclairs to chef Karin and she said....It's perfect !!! :D

PS. Meng said my pastry cream looks like spaghetti...o_O

Lesson 13 : Choux Pastry

Choux pastry [shoo] Also called choux paste, pâte à choux and cream-puff pastry , this special pastry is made by an entirely different method from other pastries. The dough, created by combining flour with boiling water and butter, then beating eggs into the mixture, is very sticky and pastelike. It puffs up in the oven until it is eventually set by the heat. The airiness, in fact, is caused because choux has a high water content, which is turned into steam during baking and this forces the pastry shell outwards and gives it volume.

After baking, the puffs are split, hollowed out and filled with a custard, whipped cream or other filling. Besides cream puffs, choux pastry is used to make such specialties as ÉCLAIRS, GOUGÈRE and PROFITEROLES.


Chef Angelo created the beautiful plate presentation for us...

My favourite...looks so tempting...


Chef Angelo kindly showed us how to make sugar spun....


so funny......after tasting time...we, BP3, finished it all quickly as always...lol

Making choux is not difficult for me...it's easy than you think...for first day we just decorated it with chantily cream, melted chocolate and icing sugar...

I filled some of my choux with melted dark chocolate...but after a while, it bacame solid ^ ^''

We had to do plate presentation...you can see my plate...such a lazy girl.... Anyway, they (chef and classmates) all like my presentation ..Yahoo !!! ..( I did this on my Tiramisu in KL before so i know it looks good...*laugh*)


These were some of my classmates' presentation...so much more effort than i did..:P